Title: The Medical Defense in Mesothelioma Cases
1The Medical Defense in Mesothelioma Cases
- Edward M. Slaughter
- Hawkins Parnell Thackston Young LLP
- 4514 Cole Avenue
- Dallas, TX 75205
2Overview
- Mesothelioma The Basics
- Stains
- Malignancy
- Tissue Digestion
3MESOTHELIOMA THE BASICS
- Pleural
- Usually caused by asbestos or some similar fiber,
but not always - Peritoneal
- Maybe caused by asbestos 50 or less
- Pericardial
- Rarely caused by asbestos
- Testicular mesothelioma
- Too uncomfortable to discuss
4Pleural Mesothelioma
5Pleural Mesothelioma
- Caused by prior radiation therapy at the site
- Other fibers
- Erionite (which is not just in Turkey)
- Taconite
- Maybe any fiber that that is biopersistent?
- Spontaneous or ideopathic
6Peritoneal Mesothelioma
- Often caused by some other inflammatory process
- Be on the lookout for
- Prior hernias
- Diverticulitis
- Hysterectomies
- Anything that leads to chronic inflammation
7Pericardial and Testicular
- If you ever see one we can talk about then.
8Types of mesothelioma
- Epithelial
- Sarcomatoid
- Biphasic
9Epithelial
10Sarcomatoid
11Biphasic
12Extremely Rare Diagnosis
- Desmoplastic
- Really just a rare subtype of sarcomatoid
- Hard to diagnose and easily confused with
sarcomatoid adenocarcinoma - Benign mesothelial hyperplasia
- Reactive process that looks like malignant
mesothelioma - Well differentiated papillary mesothelioma
- benign
13Desmoplastic
14Old men get Mesothelioma
- Female mesotheliomas are more often from another
cause maybe 50-50 - Really young people usually dont have sufficient
latency - If the plaintiff is young look for other causes
15Take Away 1 Be Suspicious
- Mesothelioma in any location other than the
pleura (by the lung) is very suspect - Mesothelioma diagnosis with extra words is
suspect (wdpm, hyperplasia, etc) - Mesothelioma in young people and women is
suspect. - Be suspicious of the diagnosis in these cases.
16STAINS
17Stain Limitations
- Cant show if process is malignant or benign
- No single stain can definitively diagnose
mesothelioma - Glut-1 Caveat
18Specificity v. Sensitivity
EXAMPLE LeuM1 STAIN
- LeuM1 Stain Specific to Adenocarcinoma
- LeuM1 Stain Does Not Have High Sensitivity
though, because does not react with all
adenocarcinoma
19Other Common Stains
- Cytokeratins
- Glycoproteins
- Calretinin
- Thrombomodulin
- HBME-1
- Cadherins
- TTF-1
20Stains Used to Diagnose MesotheliomaCK5 -
CYTOKERATIN 5/6
21Stains Used to Diagnose MesotheliomaMESOTHELIN
22Stains Used to Diagnose MesotheliomaTHROMBOMODULI
N
23Stains Used to Diagnose MesotheliomaHBME-1
24Stains Used to Diagnose MesotheliomaCALRETININ
25Stains Used to Diagnose MesotheliomaWT-1
26Take Away 2 Stains are just a tool
- IHC stains are NEVER enough for a complete
diagnosis - They are positive stains and marginally positive
stains - No one stain is enough
- Stains cannot distinguish between malignant and
benign mesotheliomas
27Diagnosing Malignancy
- Invasion
- Necrosis
- Clinical Correlation
- Other factors
28Stromal Invasion
- True stromal invasion is by far the most
reliable - criterion of mesothelial malignancy
Andrew Churg M.D., et al The Separation of Benign
and Malignant Mesothelial Proliferations The
American Journal of Surgical Pathology 24(9)1183
29Minimal Invasion
06/29/05 - Report of Dr. J.F. Legier
One single slide, 589D4, shows early invasive
disease with minimal invasion of fibrous stroma
by mesothelial clusters.
306 Days Earlier Same Pathology
06/23/05 - Report of Dr. J.C. Maddox
based on the clinical history and imaging
studies that showed progression of the disease
(malignant mesothelioma on the left with
extensive mediastinal invasion) the patient
more likely than not had a malignant mesothelioma
that caused his death.
31And Another Opinion
05/21/07 - Report of I. Allen Feingold
Despite all of the above hisotpathological and
even immunohistochemical evidence against
malignancy in this case, it is important to
consider the observation of Dr. Robert Viggiano
who saw the patient in consultation and follow up
32Only Seen 10 Times
- Q Okay. And out of those 7- or 800 cases, how
many times have you had a difficult diagnosis
like this, where you had to compare this sort of
a benign, reactive process to a malignant
mesothelioma? - A Maybe ten times.
Dr. Jacques Legier, pp. 72-73
33Clinical Correlation
- Just fancy talk for Did the patient seem like a
man with mesothelioma?
34Necrosis
- Is there dead or dying tissue?
35Other Factors
- Read this
- Andrew Churg M.D., et al The Separation of
Benign and Malignant Mesothelial Proliferations
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology
24(9)1183
36Take away 3 Not all Mesotheliomas are
Malignant
- Stains dont prove malignancy
- Invasion, Necrosis, Clinical Correlation do
37(No Transcript)
38Tissue Selection
- A whole lung is ideal, but not necessary
- Autopsy, Pneumonectomy or biopsy
- Uninvolved tissue (not the tumor)
- The Bigger, The Better
- Multiple Sites
- But as little as a gram can be enough
39Results of Fiber Burden Analysis
- Evidence of Fiber Type
- Amount of Exposure
- Evidence of Other Exposures
- Helpful with Alternative Exposure Defenses
40Take Away 4 Digestion can be valuable
- To prove amphibole exposure
- To suggest an absence of chrysotile
- To prove a dose estimate
41All 4 Take Aways orThe Big Finale
- Be Suspicious of unusual mesotheliomas (extra
words, people under 60, women) - Stains are imperfect and dont prove malignancy -
just differentiate between mesothelioma and other
processes - Malignancy has to be proven invasion, necrosis,
clinical correlation - Digestion can prove fiber type and dose, but not
diagnosis