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(Chest. 2005;128:1068.)
© 2005 American College of Chest Physicians

Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma With Less-Frequent Features

Enrique Anton, MD, PhD

Hospital of Zumarraga Guipuzcoa, Spain

Correspondence to: Enrique Antón, MD, PhD, C/Eriete, 12 31180-Zizur Mayor, Navarra, Spain; e-mail: ejaaranda{at}hotmail.com

To the Editor:

Pistolesi et al (October 2004)1 state that "diagnosis and management of malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) are major challenges that often frustrate both patient and clinician." I would like to make the following comments.

Generally, malignant mesothelioma equates with a diffuse malignant mesothelioma, a rare and fatal tumor related frequently to asbestos exposure, which could arise from the surface of all serosas. The most frequent location is the pleura (> 90%), followed by the peritoneum (6 to 10%).2 Although the majority of cases are unicavitary, sometimes simultaneous involvement of the pleura and peritoneum can occur.3

Unilateral pleural effusion, an early manifestation of MPM, is the most frequent radiographic finding in MPM,1 and may be present in up to 95% of patients during clinical evolution.4 However, physicians should remember that the absence of pleural effusion is rare but possible,3 and pleural thickening and/or calcification could be the only finding.4

Pleural effusion is usually insufficient for diagnosing mesothelioma based on cytologic analysis alone.1 However, when peritoneal involvement occurs and ascites are present, cytology could be a useful tool, helping in the diagnosis of mesothelioma.3

Currently, the outcome of MPM is unavoidably fatal; although the "median" survival is approximately 9 to 12 months,1 occasionally an individual patient with mesothelioma could have a very poor outcome.3 Prognostic score systems have been developed in recent years1 with the aim of being able to help in clinical trials. However, these systems applied to an individual patient could sometimes not be very reliable. If the five prognostic factors of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer5 were applied to the patient referred above,3 the patient would be classified in the good prognostic group (only two poor prognostic factors). In fact, he only lived 1 month after diagnosis.

In our daily clinical practice, physicians have to attend not to a "series" of patients with "mean" features but individual patients sometimes significantly different from classical descriptions. In addition to useful information provided in updates and reviews, we have to take into account other less-frequent features usually absent in these reports but with obvious usefulness for diagnosis and management of our real patients.

References

  1. Pistolesi, M, Rusthoven, J (2004) Malignant pleural mesothelioma: update, current management, and newer therapeutic strategies. Chest 126,1318-1329[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Attanoos, RL, Gibbs, AR Pathology of malignant mesothelioma. Histopathology 1997;30,403-418[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
  3. Antón Aranda, E, Otegui Recio, A, Marti Cabane, J Diffuse malignant pleural mesothelioma with unusual radiological presentation. An Med Interna 2003;20,214-215[Medline]
  4. Kawashima, A, Libshitz, HI Malignant pleural mesothelioma: CT manifestations in 50 cases. AJR Am J Roentgenol 1990;155,965-969[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  5. Curran, D, Sahmoud, T, Therasse, P, et al Prognostic factors in patients with pleural mesothelioma: the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer experience. J Clin Oncol 1998;16,145-152[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma With Less-Frequent Features

Massimo Pistolesi, MD

University of Florence Florence, Italy

Correspondence to: Massimo Pistolesi, MD, Department of Critical Care, University of Florence, Viale G.B. Morgangni 85, Firenze 50134, Italy; e-mail: massimo{at}unifi.it

To the Editor:

I agree with Dr. Anton that the clinical findings in individual patients who are encountered in everyday clinical practice may often deviate significantly from the "mean" features described in updates or reviews. However, I believe that clinical medicine is not a summation of case reports and that the amount of knowledge we gather from clinical trials and literature surveys could greatly help to build solid bases for diagnostic decision making. Medicine is a probabilistic science in which we may build on clinical and instrumental findings that are expected to be of more common appearance. The patient referred to by Dr. Anton had a greater than expected deviation from the norm based on the present knowledge on pleural mesothelioma. If one gathers evidence that many patients besides yours deviate from the "mean" clinical behavior, then there is evidence that new solid knowledge on the subject has arisen. Otherwise, your findings could be good material for a very interesting case report.





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