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Heart surgery in infants typically involves complete removal of the thymus gland to improve access to the heart. However, the thymus plays a key role in developing the immune system in early childhood, especially in the production and maturation of T lymphocytes, which help the body defend itself against infections.
The THYMIC study tests the hypothesis that partial removal of the thymus (partial thymectomy) during heart surgery may better preserve the child's immune function compared to total removal (complete thymectomy). The goal is to determine whether this conservative surgical approach could reduce the risk of immune system impairment and infections in the months following surgery.
This is a prospective, interventional, single-center study conducted at CHU de Nantes, involving 3 groups of infants:
By comparing the immune responses and infection rates among the groups, the researchers hope to better understand the long-term effects of thymectomy in infants. The results could support future recommendations to preserve part of the thymus when possible during heart surgery.
Participation in the study does not change the medical or surgical care of the child. The decision to perform a partial or complete thymectomy is made by the surgeon based on the child's anatomy. The additional blood samples are small in volume and follow current safety regulations.
Full description
The THYMIC study is a prospective, single-center, interventional clinical trial conducted at the University Hospital of Nantes (CHU de Nantes), France. It aims to evaluate the medium-term immunological impact of thymectomy (total versus partial) in infants undergoing cardiac surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) before the age of 6 months.
Background and Rationale During most pediatric cardiac surgeries, the thymus is completely removed to allow better access to the heart and great vessels. However, the thymus plays a critical role in T-cell development during infancy, contributing to immune system maturation. Prior studies suggest that complete thymectomy in early life may result in persistent alterations in T-cell immunity and increased susceptibility to infections. Yet, the comparative impact of partial versus complete thymectomy on immune function remains poorly studied.
Partial thymectomy is technically feasible in selected cases depending on the anatomy, and could offer a balance between surgical access and immune preservation. The THYMIC study tests the hypothesis that partial thymectomy is associated with less impairment of cellular immunity at 12 months postoperatively and could therefore become the preferred surgical approach in appropriate cases.Study Design
This is a non-randomized, controlled study including 70 infants:
• 50 infants undergoing cardiac surgery with CPB and either partial or complete thymectomy (surgical decision made
The THYMIC study is a prospective, single-center, interventional clinical trial conducted at the University Hospital of Nantes (CHU de Nantes), France. It aims to evaluate the medium-term immunological impact of thymectomy (total versus partial) in infants undergoing cardiac surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) before the age of 6 months.
Background and Rationale During most pediatric cardiac surgeries, the thymus is completely removed to allow better access to the heart and great vessels. However, the thymus plays a critical role in T-cell development during infancy, contributing to immune system maturation. Prior studies suggest that complete thymectomy in early life may result in persistent alterations in T-cell immunity and increased susceptibility to infections. Yet, the comparative impact of partial versus complete thymectomy on immune function remains poorly studied.
Partial thymectomy is technically feasible in selected cases depending on the anatomy, and could offer a balance between surgical access and immune preservation. The THYMIC study tests the hypothesis that partial thymectomy is associated with less impairment of cellular immunity at 12 months postoperatively and could therefore become the preferred surgical approach in appropriate cases.
Study Design
This is a non-randomized, controlled study including 70 infants:
The study involves two blood draws:
Parents are given a standardized infection monitoring questionnaire at hospital discharge, to be completed with their pediatrician or other care providers over the 12-month follow-up. A phone call is scheduled at 6 months to reinforce compliance. At 12 months, families return for the second blood draw and review of the infection questionnaire. An additional consultation is conducted 15 days later to provide results and arrange follow-up if needed.
Primary Objective To compare cellular immune profiles at 12 months between infants with partial versus complete thymectomy. Key markers include absolute counts of lymphocytes and subsets, and T-cell receptor excision circles (TRECs).
Secondary Objectives
To compare:
Methodology Notes Due to the impossibility of preoperative randomization (surgical decision on thymectomy extent depends on intraoperative anatomy), this is a non-randomized study with group allocation based on surgical findings.
All data are pseudonymized and collected in an electronic case report form (eCRF). Immunological assays are processed via the CHU's certified laboratories (CIMNA platform and hematology department).
Ethical Considerations and Risk-Benefit Assessment The study poses minimal risk. Blood samples are within safe volume limits for infants, and pain is minimized using anesthetic cream and inhaled analgesia (EMLA, MEOPA). Thymectomy extent is based solely on clinical indication and does not depend on study participation. Families benefit from enhanced immunological monitoring, which could identify and help manage acquired immune deficiencies.
Significance This study may provide critical data to support a shift toward more conservative surgical practices regarding thymus preservation in early cardiac surgery, with the potential to reduce long-term immunological sequelae in this vulnerable population.
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Inclusion criteria
For the control groups:
Control group A (cardiac surgery without thymectomy):
Control group B (non-cardiac surgery)
Exclusion Criteria :
Exclusion criteria
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70 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Alexis Chenouard, PH; Evelyne Gauvard
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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