Multimodality
therapy:
All of the
standard approaches to treating solid tumors—radiation, chemotherapy, and
surgery—have been investigated in patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma.
Although surgery, by itself, is not very effective, surgery combined with
adjuvant chemotherapy and radiation (trimodality therapy) has produced
significant survival extension (3–14 years) among patients with favorable
prognostic factors. However, other large series of examining multimodality
treatment have only demonstrated modest improvement in survival (median survival
14.5 months and only 29.6% surviving 2 years). Reducing the bulk of the tumor
with cytoreductive surgery is key to extending survival. Two surgeries have
been developed: extrapleural pneumonectomy and pleurectomy/decortication. The
indications for performing these operations are unique. The choice of operation
depends on the size of the patient's tumor. This is an important consideration
because tumor volume has been identified as a prognostic factor in
mesothelioma. Pleurectomy/decortication spares the underlying lung and is
performed in patients with early stage disease when the intention is to remove
all gross visible tumor (macroscopic complete resection), not simply
palliation. Extrapleural pneumonectomy is a more extensive operation that involves
resection of the parietal and visceral pleurae, underlying lung, ipsilateral
diaphragm, and ipsilateral pericardium. This operation is indicated for a
subset of patients with more advanced tumors, who can tolerate a pneumonectomy.
No comments:
Post a Comment