Overview

Mediastinal tumours encompass a wide spectrum of pathology. The frequency distribution and compartmental location of these tumours provides a powerful diagnostic framework before tissue is obtained.

Frequency of mediastinal tumours in adults
Neurogenic tumours20% — most common overall
Thymoma20%
Primary cysts20%
Lymphoma13%
Germ cell tumours10%
LocationAnterosuperior 54% · Posterior 26% · Middle 20%
Key clinical rule

Anterosuperior compartment tumours are more often malignant, especially in patients aged 10–40 years. In children, neurogenic tumours and lymphomas are the most common subtypes. Absence of symptoms is a reasonably good indicator of benignity — two-thirds of symptomatic patients have malignant disease.

Tumours by compartment

Common mediastinal tumours by ITMIG compartment
CompartmentTumour types
Prevascular (anterior)Thymic lesions (cysts, hyperplasia, thymoma, thymic carcinoma, thymic carcinoid) · Germ cell tumours · Lymphoma · Intrathoracic goitre · Metastatic lymphadenopathy
Visceral (middle)Foregut cysts · Bronchogenic cysts · Lymphoma · Metastatic lymphadenopathy · Tracheal lesions
Paravertebral (posterior)Neurogenic tumours · Spine infections (discitis, osteomyelitis) · Cold abscess · Haematoma

Clinical features

About one-third of patients with mediastinal masses are asymptomatic — discovered incidentally on chest imaging. Two-thirds present with non-specific symptoms: cough, dyspnoea, chest pain, heaviness, or fever. Features pointing to malignancy include mechanical compression or invasion of mediastinal structures.

Symptoms and signs by mechanism
Structure compressed / invadedSymptoms and signs
SVCSVC syndrome — facial oedema, arm swelling, dilated neck veins, headache; worse on leaning forward
Trachea / bronchiStridor, wheeze, dyspnoea, cough, atelectasis
OesophagusDysphagia, regurgitation
Recurrent laryngeal nerveHoarseness, bovine cough
Phrenic nerveIpsilateral diaphragmatic palsy — dyspnoea, raised hemidiaphragm
Sympathetic chainHorner's syndrome — ptosis, miosis, anhidrosis
Brachial plexusArm pain, weakness (T1 distribution)

Investigations

  • Chest X-ray: localises the mass; calcification common in intrathoracic goitre and teratoma; lateral view essential to assign compartment
  • CT chest: investigation of choice — characterises size, density (fat, calcification, cystic components), relationship to adjacent structures, pleural and pericardial involvement
  • MRI: superior to CT for vascular invasion, neural foraminal involvement, and cardiac invasion
  • Echocardiography: for visceral compartment tumours to assess cardiac and pericardial involvement
  • PET-CT: distinguishes high-grade from low-grade thymic lesions; useful for lymphoma staging
  • Tumour markers: AFP and β-hCG in all young patients (rule out GCT); LDH for lymphoma
  • CT-guided core biopsy: tissue diagnosis in 80–90% of cases
  • Mediastinoscopy / mediastinotomy: when CT-guided biopsy fails or anatomical access is limited
Biopsy strategy in anterior mediastinal mass

In a young patient with an anterior mediastinal mass — always obtain AFP and β-hCG before biopsy. If a GCT is likely, tissue is required. If a thymoma appears encapsulated and resectable on CT, biopsy before surgery risks capsule breach and tumour seeding — proceed directly to resection. If lymphoma is suspected clinically, CT-guided core biopsy or excision of a peripheral lymph node is preferred over mediastinoscopy.

Mediastinal cysts

Primary cysts account for approximately 20% of mediastinal masses. Types include bronchogenic cysts (most common — 50–60%; paratracheal or carinal location; lined by respiratory epithelium), pericardial cysts (right cardiophrenic angle; typically asymptomatic), oesophageal duplication cysts (posterior mediastinum; can cause dysphagia), and neuroenteric cysts (associated with vertebral anomalies). All symptomatic cysts should be excised — VATS is preferred for accessible lesions. Asymptomatic cysts may be monitored but carry risk of infection, haemorrhage, or rupture.

Further reading

All clinical content should be verified against current guidelines before clinical application. This resource is intended for revision and educational purposes only.

Standard textbooks

  • Shields TW, LoCicero J, Reed CE, Feins RH. General Thoracic Surgery. 7th ed. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
  • Sellke FW, del Nido PJ, Swanson SJ. Sabiston & Spencer Surgery of the Chest. 9th ed. Elsevier.
  • Pearson FG, et al. Thoracic Surgery. 3rd ed. Churchill Livingstone.

Current guidelines & resources