Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma: Outcome of Limited Surgical Management
Peter G. Phillipsa, George Asimakopoulosb and M. Omar Maiwandb,*
a Department of Thoracic Medicine, Harefield Hospital, Hill
End Road, Harefield, Middlesex UB9 6JH, UK
b Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Harefield Hospital,
Hill End Road, Harefield, Middlesex UB9 6JH, UK
* Corresponding author. Tel.: +44-1895-828558; fax:
+44-1895-828528
cryotherapy@rbh.nthames.nhs.uk
Received October 25, 2001; received in revised form October 29, 2002; accepted October 31, 2002
Abstract:
This study presents data on limited surgical management of malignant
pleural mesothelioma. We reviewed retrospectively 70 cases of the
disease managed surgically over a 10 year period. Fifteen patients
received only diagnostic direct pleural biopsy, 40 had video-assisted
thoracoscopic, pleural biopsy and talc pleurodesis while 15 patients
underwent thoracotomy and pleurectomy for disease confined to the
pleura. There were two in-hospital deaths. Actuarial survival was
significantly longer in the thoracotomy group (median 14 months vs. 6
months in the other two groups,
). Survival after limited surgical management of
malignant mesothelioma is comparable to a previously reported more
radical surgical approach.
Introduction:
Malignant mesothelioma is the most common primary malignancy of the pleura. It arises from the mesothelial surfaces of the pleura as well as the peritoneum and the pericardium. Recognition of an association between asbestos exposure and malignant mesothelioma dates from the work of Wagner and colleagues in the 1960s [1]. The simian virus 40 (SV40) was recently identified as a significant additional carcinogen [2]. The disease shows a male preponderance, with presentation between the fifth and the seventh decades. The incidence of the disease continues to rise in the UK where annual male mesothelioma deaths are expected to reach about 3000 by the year 2020.
Diagnosis relies on histological analysis of adequate pleural biopsies. Histological subtypes include epithelioid (approximately 60% of cases), sarcomatous and biphasic (including both epithelioid and sarcomatous features). The original staging system devised by Butchart et al. [3] has been superseded by a TNM system, in line with other forms of malignancy, and updated in 1995 by the International Mesothelioma Interest Group [4]. It has previously been established that prognosis is worsened by male sex, age greater than 65 years, short duration of symptoms to presentation, poor performance status at presentation, non-epitheloid histology, thrombocytosis, low haemoglobin and fever.
Surgical diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma can be achieved in the majority of cases without recourse to open procedure, using video-assisted thoracoscopy (VAT) [5]. Palliative techniques include talc pleurodesis (either at thoracoscopy or thoracotomy), pleurectomy with decortication, extrapleural pneumonectomy and application of intrapleural chemotherapy.
Malignant mesothelioma remains a condition of poor prognosis with a median survival of 6-18 months [5]. As life expectancy after diagnosis of the disease is short, treatment is palliative. Such prognostic figures remain poor despite attempts of multimodality treatment. We report a retrospective analysis of our experience of diagnosis and treatment of malignant mesothelioma at a regional UK cardiorespiratory centre over a 10 year period.
Methods:
A retrospective analysis was made of all patients who were referred to a single consultant thoracic surgeon (O.M.), between January 1989 and March 1999, with pleural pathology subsequently diagnosed as malignant mesothelioma. Data were obtained from the patients' medical notes. The referring centres and general practitioners of the patients were consulted for additional information when this was necessary. Analyzed data included age, sex, smoking history, previous asbestos exposure, degree of thrombocytosis, postoperative complications and length of survival. Patients' histological diagnoses were classified as epitheloid, sarcomatous or biphasic mesothelioma. Patients were included in the following groups based on the type of operative intervention undertaken:
Group I: open pleural biopsy in the presence of lung adhesions to the chest wall and without significant pleural effusion. In these patients, VAT was not feasible technically and pleurectomy / decortication was not considered due to tumour infiltration beyond the parietal pleura. Previous needle biopsies were negative.
Group II: this was carried out on patients with pleural effusion and tumour substantially invading the chest wall, lung parenchyma and mediastinal structures. VAT was used for diagnostic purposes and for talc pleurodesis. Groups I and II included patients at >Stage I disease and differed only in the fact that VAT was not possible in Group I patients due to the extensively invasive stage of the tumour.
Group III: pleurectomy for Stage I mesothelioma, confined to the parietal pleura in the presence of previously established histological diagnosis.
2.1. Statistical analysis
Nominal data were analyzed by means of the
2 test and interval data by means
of the Mann-Whitney test for univariate analysis. Actuarial survival was
calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method and compared with the log-rank
test. Statistical significance was assumed for
.
Results
Between January 1989 and March 1999 a total of 74 patients were
diagnosed with malignant mesothelioma following tertiary referral. Of
these patients, four were treated by application of intrapleural
cisplatin and have been excluded from this analysis. Demographic and
clinical data of the patients are shown in Table 1.
There was no predilection of histological diagnosis for either sex,
smoking history or duration of symptoms. Of the 70 patients, 21%
(
) underwent
diagnostic direct pleural biopsy only (Group I), 58% (
) underwent pleural biopsy, through
VAT, followed by talc pleurodesis (Group II), and 21% (
) of patients had lateral
thoracotomy and pleurectomy (Group III). In two (3.6%) of the 55
patients, thoracoscopy did not yield the diagnosis and these required a
further CT guided needle biopsy.
Actuarial survival, including the two in-hospital deaths, is presented
in Fig. 1. Median survival was 6 months for Groups
I and II and 14 months (
) for Group III (Fig. 1). One year
survival was 20%, 17.5% and 53.5% in Groups I, II and III,
respectively. Two year survival was 6.7%, 10% and 40% and 5 year
survival was 0%, 0% and 27%, respectively.
From a histological point of view, 48 (68.5%) patients had epitheloid
tumours, six (8.5%) had sarcomatous, while 16 (23%) mesotheliomas were
biphasic. Survival was longer with epitheloid histological subtype
(median of 9.5 months,
) compared to biphasic (5.5 months) or sarcomatous
subtype (4 months). Patients in Group III were significantly (
) more likely to have
epitheloid tumours than those in Groups I and II. At the time of
retrospective analysis (July 2000), four patients in our series were
still alive. One patient from Group I was alive at 14 months, two from
Group II at 16 months and one from Group III at 54 months. Analysis of
survival statistics showed a weak inverse correlation between age at
presentation and prognosis (
,
). The prognosis showed moderate correlation with the
degree of initial thrombocytosis (
,
).
Discussions
This retrospective study reports data on the management of patients who were referred with radiologically suspicious pleural lesions to one tertiary referral thoracic surgical centre and were subsequently found to have malignant mesothelioma. VAT is widely recognized as a procedure of diagnostic and therapeutic value. It has been established that thoracoscopy results in obtaining an adequate amount of tissue for histological diagnosis in the vast majority of patients [5]. In our series, 53 (96.4%) of the 55 mesotheliomas that received VAT biopsy were diagnosed successfully.
VAT talc pleurodesis has been used successfully in the palliation of malignant pleural effusions, including patients with mesothelioma [5]. VAT talc pleurodesis is carried out, in preference to bedside talc slurry, in particular when the diagnosis is not established preoperatively and VAT is performed primarily for diagnostic purposes. In our institution, we treated 40 patients with thoracoscopic talc pleurodesis for malignant mesothelioma causing debilitating pleural effusion and stage higher than I. Significant recurrence of the effusion did not occur in any of these patients. Their survival did not differ from patients who only had direct pleural biopsy but it was significantly shorter than Stage I patients receiving pleurectomy.
Tumours confined to parietal pleura (Stage I according to Butchart and TNM classification) were treated with pleurectomy. In these patients, postoperative morbidity was low (Table 1). In the pleurectomy group, postoperative survival was significantly longer in comparison to patients with mesothelioma invading the chest wall who received diagnostic direct pleural biopsy or VAT pleural biopsy and talc pleurodesis. Furthermore, there was an association between age and survival as well as between thrombocytosis and survival. It has previously been demonstrated that age, duration of symptoms, degree of thrombocytosis and histological subtype [6] have prognostic implications for malignant mesothelioma.
Current treatment strategies for malignant mesothelioma vary according to the referral centre, and include combinations of surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, photodynamic therapy and medical palliation. There is little general consensus with regard to treatment modalities and the role of clinical staging in the management of malignant mesothelioma.
The surgical approach to malignant mesothelioma has included attempts of palliation with cytoreduction with the hope of disease modification. Pleurectomy has proven successful in reducing the recurrence of pleural effusion and dyspnoea in patients with the disease [7]. The procedure carries a low operative mortality (1-2%) and is the preferred palliative treatment for Stage I malignant mesothelioma in our institution. In our experience, one (6.6%) of the 15 patents died in hospital. Previously reported median survivals range from 6.7 to 21 months [8,9]. This compares with our own figure for median survival irrespective of histology of 14 months. Pleurectomy per se has not been shown to improve prognosis. However, there have been reports that the combination of pleurectomy with irradiation achieved a mean survival of 22.5 months, with a 2 year survival of 41%, in a select group of patients with epitheloid mesothelioma [9]. Our patients received radiotherapy to the chest drain sites but no other form of combination therapy.
Extrapleural pneumonectomy, in which the ipsilateral parietal and visceral pleura, the contained lung, pericardium and diaphragm are resected en bloc, has been used for mesothelioma in some thoracic surgical centres. The procedure was originally related to high morbidity and mortality [10] and was, therefore, not practised by our institution during the period covered in this report. Indeed, large series of patients undergoing extrapleural pneumonectomy over the previous two decades report morbidity rates of 50% and overall median survival of 10-19 months [10]. These survival rates are similar to the ones achieved at our centre in patients undergoing pleurectomy which carries a low complication rate. There have been, however, recent encouraging reports of patients undergoing extrapleural pneumonectomy in combination with photodynamic therapy, radiation or chemotherapy [11-13]. Median survival for Stage I tumours was 33-35 months. Larger experience will be necessary but, provided complication rates are low, multimodality treatment for Stage I mesothelioma is promising.
With regard to non-surgical treatment, trials of systemic chemotherapy have been disappointing both for single agent and combined agent therapy. Response rates have ranged from 0 to 20% [14]. Intrapleural therapy has been attempted for malignant mesothelioma in the form of intracavitary chemotherapy with radionuclides or biological agents [9]. Intrapleural chemotherapy with cisplatin is currently being used at our institution. The four patients treated so far were excluded from this analysis and will be reported separately.
In our practice, the decision to carry out thoracotomy and decortication is based on histological findings obtained at thoracoscopy and includes patients that belong mostly to Stage I, according to the Butchart and TNM classification. In our practice, the choice of surgical procedure is largely based on macroscopic findings at thoracoscopy or thoracotomy. Thus, patients with tumour confined ostensibly within the capsule of the ipsilateral parietal pleura proceed to pleurectomy with decortication. In addition to their early stage of disease, these patients were more likely to have tumours of epithelial histology. The improved survival, therefore, may by attributable to the combined factors of the early stage of the disease, the histological type and not necessarily to the cytoreductive effect of decortication. Furthermore, Group III patients were probably not comparable with Groups I and II, due to the different stage of the disease. It is important to emphasize that, in view of the poor prognosis of malignant mesothelioma, we decided our operative strategy in order to achieve the best possible palliation with low complication rate but without curative intent.
In conclusion, our series has confirmed certain of the accepted demographic features of malignant mesothelioma. Unlike a number of studies reporting aggressive multimodality regimes the current series represents a relatively unselected group of patients, undergoing cost-effective, minimally invasive preoperative assessment. When accompanied by appropriate intraoperative findings, cytoreductive pleurectomy was performed. This proved well tolerated and with potential survival advantage over advanced and possibly more aggressive tumours. Pleurectomy remains an important and widely applicable surgical tool in cases of malignant mesothelioma. Its complication rate is low and is associated with comparable median postoperative survival to that reported in most series of patients undergoing more radical surgical resection. The combination of this procedure with developing modalities, affording improved local control, may well prove to have prognostic impact in this challenging condition.
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