Malignant pleural mesothelioma
Author: | Florian Honeyball,(1) Michael Boyer,(1) Nico van Zandwijk,(2) and Steven C Kao.(1,2) |
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Email address: | steven.kao@sydney.edu.au |
Abstract
Malignant pleural mesothelioma is a relatively uncommon disease associated with asbestos exposure. Its incidence increased markedly following the widespread mining and use of asbestos in many industries. The legal aspects regarding compensation cases for those who have developed this disease has raised its profile in the media, but also compounds the stress of diagnosis for patients. It has an insidious onset and may clinically and pathologically mimic other benign or malignant processes, complicating diagnosis. Radical surgery may be used for a highly selected population of malignant pleural mesothelioma patients in the context of multimodality treatment in an experienced thoracic surgical centre, but there is no randomised evidence to support its benefit. In most cases surgery is used to treat symptoms or obtain tissue for diagnosis. Combination of a platinum agent and pemetrexed is now widely used and shown to prolong life. Other treatments including radiotherapy, analgesics and supportive interventions are an integral part of the treatment of this disease. Further research is being undertaken on promising novel therapies for use in this disease, which will be discussed in this review.
Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a neoplasm originating from mesothelial cells, which form the membranes surrounding the lung cavities. It is currently a disease mainly of the industrialised world, closely linked to asbestos exposure.1 Seldom diagnosed prior to the advent of widespread asbestos mining in the early to mid twentieth century, it has risen in incidence over the last five decades.2, 3 According to the most recent Australian Institute of Health and Welfare data, in 2009 there were 666 cases of malignant mesothelioma diagnosed in Australia.4
This review will provide a brief overview of the diagnosis, current treatment modalities and some novel systemic treatment strategies that have been explored in MPM.
Asbestos and malignant mesothelioma
MPM is a disease with particular relevance to Australia. Asbestos was first mined in Australia in the 1880s near Jones Creek, a town in NSW.5 It was not until the late 1940s when the insulating properties of asbestos rendered it a useful product in the building industry during the post war building boom, and subsequent demand for asbestos saw mining production rise exponentially in mines in NSW, Tasmania, South Australia and Western Australia.5 There has also been widespread exposure within the building and transport industries in which asbestos was broadly utilised.6
Diagnosis
Clinical features of MPM usually develop gradually and may consist of constitutional symptoms including weight loss, fatigue and night sweats, as well as local symptoms such as dyspnoea and chest pain.7 Initial investigations should include chest X-ray and computed tomography.
The most frequent finding on initial investigations is that of a pleural effusion. As MPM has different histological patterns (three major subtypes: epithelioid, sarcomatoid or mixed/biphasic),8 and may resemble benign mesothelial disease, malignant lung disease or sarcoma, formal diagnosis on a tissue biopsy by a pathologist experienced in the diagnosis of MPM is recommended.8
The pathological diagnosis of MPM requires the observation of invasion of the neoplastic mesothelial cells into surrounding tissue on histological sections,8 and the diagnosis should be supported by appropriate immunohistochemical labelling (two positive mesothelial markers and two negative carcinoma markers).9 Cytology-only diagnosis of epithelioid MPM on aspirated effusion fluid remains controversial, although cytological diagnosis is achievable in many cases with supportive immunohistochemical investigation, particularly when the cytological findings can be correlated with imaging studies (evidence of nodularity of the pleural disorder and evidence of invasion).10 However, due to the low sensitivity of cytology only diagnosis reported in the literature,9,11 it is generally recommended that video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery be performed to obtain pleural biopsy tissue, as it also allows for drainage of pleural effusion and access for pleurodesis.12
Current treatment strategies
Surgery may be used to palliate symptoms of pleural effusion,18 or bulky pleural disease. More radical surgery with the intent to prolong survival may be used in selected patients with limited disease confined to one hemithorax. The most extensive radical surgery is extrapleural pneumonectomy (EPP), which involves excision of the pleura, lung, lymph nodes, diaphragm and pericardium en bloc. Pleurectomy and decortication is arguably a less radical procedure, in which the parietal pleura is removed and the lung is examined for any macroscopic evidence of disease, which if found is subsequently resected.19 As it is impossible to achieve a clear microscopic surgical margin, treatment strategies have been developed to consolidate further control from surgery. In the case of EPP, typically chemotherapy is given as induction treatment, followed by surgery and then hemithoracic adjuvant radiotherapy.20, 21
The MARS trial published in 2011 examined the survival benefits of EPP in comparison to no EPP after chemotherapy, as a secondary outcome. Twelve centres in the UK randomised 50 patients into the two arms of the study. In the trial, patients in the EPP arm had lower overall survival than those who were randomised not to have EPP.22 One of the main controversies of the trial was the high perioperative mortality rate of 18% in those undergoing EPP, which compares poorly to other documented rates worldwide – in the Australian experience, the 30 day mortality rate post-EPP is 5.7%.23 Further, perioperative chemotherapy regimens were not standardised and there was a significant proportion of patients who were not treated to the study protocol. On this basis, the results of this trial cannot be generalised to other experienced centres. However, in view of the lack of randomised evidence for definite benefit, multimodality approach incorporating EPP should be considered experimental and restricted to institutions with significant surgical experience with high volumes of cases.
It is only since 2003 that MPM has been shown to be responsive to chemotherapy agents. Vogelzang et al demonstrated that when patients received pemetrexed and cisplatin compared to cisplatin as monotherapy, they received a survival benefit (median overall survival 12.1 months v 9.3 months) and longer time to progression (median 5.7 months v 3.9 months).24 This combination chemotherapy was also found to improve patients’ symptoms and health-related quality of life, compared to cisplatin, alone.25 Retrospective analysis published in 2008 demonstrated similar 12 month overall survival rates between the combinations of cisplatin and pemetrexed, and carboplatin and pemetrexed (63% and 64% respectively), suggesting carboplatin equivalence with cisplatin in this regimen.26Raltitrexed, another antimetabolite, in combination with cisplatin demonstrated similar improvements in median overall survival when compared with cisplatin monotherapy (11.4 months v 8.8 months).27 Therefore, the first line standard of care for MPM patients currently is a platinum doublet with an antimetabolite, either pemetrexed or raltitrexed.
The role of maintenance chemotherapy following combination chemotherapy with platinum and pemetrexed has not been prospectively evaluated. A small non-randomised study demonstrated that pemetrexed maintenance therapy is well tolerated and is feasible to administer.28 There is an ongoing randomised phase II trial evaluating the role of maintenance pemetrexed in patients with stable disease after first-line chemotherapy (NCT01085630).
Despite the promise of personalised treatment in other solid tumours, the approach of ‘precision medicine’ is not yet a reality for MPM patients, despite international efforts over the last decade. Although targeting EGFR, VEGF and PDGFR pathways has been successful in some other solid tumours, agents targeting these pathways have failed to demonstrate benefit in MPM patients. Here, we will discuss some of the molecular pathways that have been tested in the last decade and selected, and promising potential pathways that could be targeted.
Signalling Pathway Inhibition
Although EGFR is over-expressed in most MPM, the EGFR-tyrosine kinase inhibitors, gefitinib and erlotinib, have been found to be ineffective in the treatment of MPM in two phase II trials in the first line setting.38, 39 Furthermore, two phase II trials using imatinib mesylate, a potent inhibitor of PDGFR receptor signalling and C-Kit, have shown a lack of efficacy and poor tolerability.40, 41
Although EGFR is over-expressed in most MPM, the EGFR-tyrosine kinase inhibitors, gefitinib and erlotinib, have been found to be ineffective in the treatment of MPM in two phase II trials in the first line setting.38, 39 Furthermore, two phase II trials using imatinib mesylate, a potent inhibitor of PDGFR receptor signalling and C-Kit, have shown a lack of efficacy and poor tolerability.40, 41
Anti-angiogenesis
Agents targeting the VEGF pathway that have been tested in MPM include anti-VEGF antibody (bevacizumab) and small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Bevacizumab in combination with cisplatin and gemcitabine in a randomised phase II trial, has been shown not to prolong survival in MPM patients.42 As cisplatin with gemcitabine is no longer a standard first line regimen, a further randomised study examining cisplatin and pemetrexed, with placebo or bevacizumab, is currently ongoing (the French IFCT-GFPC-0701 MAPS trial; NCT00651456).
Agents targeting the VEGF pathway that have been tested in MPM include anti-VEGF antibody (bevacizumab) and small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Bevacizumab in combination with cisplatin and gemcitabine in a randomised phase II trial, has been shown not to prolong survival in MPM patients.42 As cisplatin with gemcitabine is no longer a standard first line regimen, a further randomised study examining cisplatin and pemetrexed, with placebo or bevacizumab, is currently ongoing (the French IFCT-GFPC-0701 MAPS trial; NCT00651456).
Tyrosine kinase inhibitors inhibiting the VEGF receptors tested in unselected MPM patients include sorafenib, sunitinib, cediranib and vatalanib.43-48 These agents were all examined in single-arm phase II trial fashion and yielded a response rate from 0 to 12%, and progression free survival from 1.8 to 4.1 months. It is difficult to know if these agents have definitive activity, as no randomised trials have been done to date. Identification of predictive markers for these types of agents has been elusive, making selection of patients who are likely to benefit difficult.44
Conclusion
Progress in the treatment of MPM has been slow and the systemic treatment of MPM remains unchanged since the approval of pemetrexed used in conjunction with cisplatin in 2003. Beyond the first line treatment, there is currently no standard of care. The promise of ‘precision medicine’ is yet to arrive in the clinic for the treatment of MPM patients. Significant work is required through multidisciplinary research input into this devastating disease, starting with surgeons collecting high quality annotated specimen, translational scientists uncovering important molecular pathways and development of novel pathway or protein targeted drugs, as well as committed clinicians designing and conducting practice-changing clinical trials.
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