a mesothelioma is associated with exposure to asbestos, especially blue asbestos. A mesothelioma is a tumour of mesothelial cells which generally occurs in the pleura (rarely a mesothelioma may occur in the peritoneum or other organs)
exposure may only be brief. There may be a lag-time of 20 to 40 years. Only approximately 20% of patients have pulmonary asbestosis - however about 90% of patients report previous exposure to asbestos
when asbestos fibres are inhaled or swallowed, they can cause scarring of the lung tissues, cancer of the bronchial tree (lung cancer) and sometimes cancers in the pleura and peritoneum
wide range of occupations, notably shipbuilding, railway engineering and asbestos product manufacture, are associated with an increased risk of mesothelioma
family members of people whose work clothes were contaminated with asbestos fibres have also developed mesothelioma
condition is significantly more common in men, with a male to female ratio of 5:1
people with mesothelioma usually present with the disease between the ages of 60 and 79 years.
clinical features:
commonly presents with chest pain and dyspnoea - patients often have pleural effusions evident on examination
fatigue, profuse sweating, weight loss, anorexia and difficulty in swallowing become common as the disease progresses
presentation and diagnosis often occur at an advanced stage and the prognosis for most patients is extremely poor
investigations:
chest radiography/CT shows a pleural thickening and an associated pleural effusion. These abnormalities are usually unilateral
pleural biopsy is required for a certain diagnosis
staging
stageI: disease confined inside the capsule of the parietal pleura: ipsilateral pleura, lung, pericardium, and diaphragm
stage II: as described for stage I with intrathoracic (N1 or N2) lymph nodes
stage III: this signifies local extension of disease into the following: chest wall or mediastinum; heart or through the diaphragm, peritoneum; with or without extrathoracic or contralateral (N3) lymph node involvement
stage IV: this signifies distant metastases have occurred .
management
this tumour is generally only appropriate for symptomatic treatment. Curative surgical treatment may be possible with stage 1 disease.
extrapleural pneumonectomy - this may lengthen time to recurrence
palliative pain relief and relief from pleural effusions may be mediated by pleurectomy and decortication
chemotherapy
NICE have recommended that pemetrexed is recommended as a treatment option for malignant pleural mesothelioma only in people who have a World Health Organization (WHO) performance status of 0 or 1, who are considered to have advanced disease and for whom surgical resection is considered inappropriate
however NICE note that there is no standard chemotherapy treatment for malignant mesothelioma. Also NICE notes that there have been no published randomised controlled trials comparing survival and symptom control in patients receiving chemotherapy with those receiving active symptom control (ASC) - treatment that does not include a specific anti-cancer therapy is referred to as ASC
radiotherapy may help with pain management
prognosis
median survival from diagnosis of pleural mesothelioma varies in studies, with a range of 9-13 months. Age, tumour histology, tumour stage at diagnosis and performance status have been shown to be independent prognostic factors
data from a US study reported median survival among non-pleural mesothelioma and pleural mesothelioma patients were 18 months and 9 months, respectively (2)
receipt of either surgery or systemic therapy and particularly the combination of these two modalities was associated with better all-cause survival
epithelioid histology and younger age at diagnosis were associated with improved outcomes in pleural mesothelioma patients
mesothelioma mortality is strongly related to age, with the highest mortality rates being in older males and females (3)
in the UK in 2012-2014, on average each year more than half (52%) of deaths were in people aged 75 and over
age-specific mortality rates rise sharply in males and gradually in females from around age 45-49, peaking in the 80-84 age group for males, and in the 85-89 age group for females, and subsequently dropping
mortality rates are significantly higher for males than for females aged 55-59 and over and this gap is widest at the age of 90+, when the male:female ratio of age-specific rates (to account for the different proportions of males to females in each age group) is around 96:10
Notes (4):
most commonly used performance status scoring systems include the Karnofsky performance status (KPS) and the World Health Organization (WHO) scales. KPS is a 10-point scale ranging from 0 to 100, with higher scores representing normal day-to-day activity
WHO system is a five-point scale with lower scores representing normal day-to-day activity
in general, WHO scores of 0 and 1 are considered equivalent to KPS scores of 70-100
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