Pleural biopsy: a reliable method for determining the diagnosis but not subtype in mesothelioma
Pleural biopsy: a reliable method for determining the diagnosis but not subtype in mesothelioma
Bueno R, Reblando J, Glickman J, Jaklitsch MT, Lukanich JM, Sugarbaker DJ.
Division of Thoracic Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115, USA
BACKGROUND: Survival after tri-modality therapy with
extrapleural pneumonectomy (EPP) and postoperative chemoradiotherapy is
longer for patients with epithelial MPM versus mixed or sarcomatoid
subtypes, leading some to decline aggressive therapy for patients with
nonepithelial histology. However, pathologic diagnosis of malignant
pleural mesothelioma (MPM) and subclassification into one of the three
histologic subtypes (epithelial, mixed, sarcomatoid) can be challenging.
Pleural biopsy has been proposed as the diagnostic gold standard. We
investigated the accuracy of open pleural biopsy for diagnosis and
subtype identification in MPM.
METHODS: Patients with suspected MPM routinely undergo open
pleural biopsy to establish diagnosis. Those diagnosed definitively by
pleural biopsy or cytology are offered pleurectomy or EPP dependent on
stage and cardiorespiratory status. We reviewed medical records for all
patients undergoing EPP at our institution, comparing tissue and subtype
diagnosis at initial diagnostic biopsy versus definitive resection.
RESULTS: Between 1988 and 2000, 305 of 332 consecutive
patients undergoing EPP had MPM. One patient diagnosed with MPM at
pleural biopsy was misclassified. Subtype analysis at pleural biopsy
proved correct in 80% (226/282). Most patients (174/192) with epithelial
subtype at final diagnosis were diagnosed correctly at pleural biopsy.
However, 44% (45/103) with pathologic diagnosis of nonepithelial subtype
at resection were initially misdiagnosed with the epithelial subtype.
The sensitivity of pleural biopsy for epithelial MPM was 97% with a
specificity of 56%.
CONCLUSIONS: Open pleural biopsy is accurate and should be
considered the gold standard diagnostic method for MPM. It is less
sensitive for determining histologic subclass, particularly with
nonepithelial subtypes.
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