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The diagnosis, therapy and prognosis of diffuse malignant mesothelioma
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1989
Year
Pleural Fluid CytologySurgical OncologyTumoral PathologyMedicineSurgical PathologyHistopathologyPathologyPleural EffusionPleural DiseaseOncologyRadiologyDiffuse Malignant Mesothelioma
Between 1969 and 1985, 245 patients with diffuse malignant mesothelioma were treated (157 male, 88 female). The average age was 55.8 years and the sex ratio was 1.8:1 in favour of males. The right side was more frequently affected than the left (56.7% vs. 43.3%). A pleural effusion and dyspnoea were the presenting signs and symptoms in 83.7% of the patients and unilateral chest pain in 64.2%. Noninvasive diagnostic procedures included a chest X-ray and computed tomography of the thorax. Pleural effusion and pleural thickening were detected most frequently. Malignant cells were identified by pleural fluid cytology in 45.3% and by needle biopsy of the pleura in 42.7% of the patients. Forty-five patients were treated conservatively and 200 patients underwent operation: diagnostic thoracotomy (78); partial pleurectomy (72); total pleurectomy (46); extended pleuropneumonectomy (2); partial removal of the diaphragm (1) and total pleurectomy and upper lobectomy (1). The perioperative mortality was 6%. The conservative and postoperative treatment depended on the patients' symptoms and included radiotherapy and chemotherapy alone or in combination. The mean survival time of the 222 non-survivors was 9.2 months. After 1 year, 36% of the patients were still alive, after 2 years, 10.8% and the 5-year survival was 4.1%. The median survival time in patients treated non-operatively was 6 months--a little over half that of the patients treated surgically (10.1 months).