Mesothelioma Questions

March 14, 2007

Malignant pulmonary mesothelioma differentiated from bronchogenic carcinoma.

Filed under: Uncategorized, Definition of Mesothelioma — mesothelioma_questions @ 8:43 pm

Differentiation of mesothelioma from bronchogenic carcinoma is necessary to determine the optimal treatment strategy, and often requires histologic and/or histochemical examination of tissue samples collected by tumor biopsy.  Mesothelioma can be primarily sarcomatoid or epithelial, and the epithelial type histology resembles that of bronchogenic adenocarcinoma.  Acid mucopolysaccharide-positive, perinuclear keratin-positive, and CEA/Leu-M1-negative samples favor diagnosis of mesothelioma over adenocarcinoma.  Clinical and radiologic presentation as well as gross appearance of the different tumor types can be markedly similar.  While smoking history has a different impact on the risk for development of mesothelioma versus bronchogenic carcinoma, it is not helpful in distinguishing the two entities clinically.

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