Mesothelioma Prognosis
The overall prognosis for individuals with mesothelioma is not very good. The
disease has among the lowest five year survivability rates among different cancers and remains
extraordinarily difficult to treat. While research is ongoing and our knowledge
of the disease is definitely increasing faster than it ever has, doctors know an
actual cure is still years away. However, large variabilities exist in many
mesothelioma patients and there are people who have lived full lives after their
diagnoses.
Mesothelioma Prognosis: Statistics
When mesothelioma is examined in purely statistical terms, the
prognosis figures are discouraging.
Pleural mesothelioma typically presents in an advanced
stage of progression with a ten-to-fourteen month lifespan
expectation from diagnosis.
Peritoneal mesothelioma often presents with a slightly
more optimistic lifespan expectation and patients surviving
two to five years are not uncommon. However, after five
years, statistics show survivability dropping to well below
thirty percent.
Statistics, however, do not tell the whole story. There are a variety of
factors in the development of a patient’s mesothelioma prognosis and subtle
differences among these factors can have a dramatic impact on the course the
disease will take. The statistical models used in mesothelioma often miss the
extraordinary differences between a person’s stated prognosis/diagnosis and the
way in which the disease actually impacts his or her life. While rare, it is not
unknown for an individual to live for ten or sometimes even twenty years after a
diagnosis of mesothelioma.
Mesothelioma Prognosis: Biology of the Disease
The most important disease-specific prognostic factors for patients with
mesothelioma involve the
form of mesothelioma as presented and the
histological subtype of the presented disease. Of the two major forms of
mesothelioma, pleural mesothelioma generally presents with a worse prognosis
than peritoneal mesothelioma does. The physiological reasons for this difference
are not completely understood, but a major factor is the histological aspect of
the cancer. Pleural mesothelioma presents about fifty percent of the time with
an epitheloid histologic subtype, twenty percent of the time with sarcomatoid
subtype and the remaining thirty percent is the biphasic subtype, which is a
combination of the previous two subtypes. Peritoneal mesothelioma presents in
the vast majority of diagnoses with the epitheloid subtype. This is significant
because epitheloid mesothelioma responds more favorably to
treatment than sarcomatoid
mesothelioma or biphasic mesothelioma does. Thus, with the majority of
peritoneal cases featuring the most treatable histological subtype, one would
expect for it to have a better overall prognosis. Conversely, with only half of
pleural cases involving the most treatable subtype, one would also expect a generally
worse prognosis.
Mesothelioma Prognosis: Patient Status
Along with the biological aspects of mesothelioma as presented, another set
of important prognostic factors includes the
stage of the disease at diagnosis, the health of the patient and his or her
age. All three will have a major impact on life expectancy and the future course
of the disease.
Stage of the Disease
The stage of disease at diagnosis is a crucial factor in the development of
the patient’s prognosis. As with all forms of cancer, early detection is
important, but this is especially true of mesothelioma. Because mesothelioma
generally resists curative treatment, doctors can manage the disease more
efficiently if they have caught it in its early stages. The diffuse nature of
the disorder means advanced tumor progression will invade large areas of tissue,
making treatment even more difficult. Mesothelioma presents with symptoms shared
by a number of other diseases and often goes undiagnosed because of these
similarities. An early diagnosis is absolutely crucial if one hopes to control
the disease.
Performance Status
Another important prognostic factor is the overall health of the person, with
the patient’s age an important sub-factor in this determination. Generally, the
healthier a patient presents, the better he or she will respond to cancer
treatments and the better chances he or she has of longer survival. When grading
a patient’s health, doctors develop a figure known as a patient’s “performance
status.” There are a number of competing scales used to gauge this, but the
scale sponsored by the World Health Organization goes from 0 to 5, with 1 and 4
being the general limits of description.
Performance Status Measurements
| Number |
Description |
| 0 |
Asymptomatic |
| 1 |
Symptomatic but completely ambulant |
| 2 |
Symptomatic, <50% in bed during the day |
| 3 |
Symptomatic, >50% in bed, but not bedbound |
| 4 |
Bedbound |
| 5 |
Death |
Performance status is revisited at multiple times during the course of
treatment. It is initially developed after diagnosis and is then updated in
response to the patient’s reaction to the treatment regimen he or she is a part
of.
Mesothelioma Prognosis: Exceptions to the Statistics
As we said above, the statistical prognosis of mesothelioma is generally not in the
patient’s favor. Seen only as a set of numbers, many people are understandably
disheartened when they learn about their diagnosis. However, notable exceptions
to these statistics do exist. Among the most famous of these exceptions was Dr.
Stephen J. Gould of Harvard University. Dr. Gould was an internationally
respected paleontologist and evolutionary biologist who conducted important
research in both of these fields. Dr. Gould was diagnosed with peritoneal
mesothelioma in 1982. After an initial period of depression, motivated by all of
the negative statistics he read regarding his diagnosis, he became determined to
not let the statistics regarding life expectancy rob him of all hope. When he
died in 2002, it was from another form of cancer, totally unrelated to his
mesothelioma. Dr. Gould has written about his experience with peritoneal
mesothelioma and his determination to not let simple statistics dictate his
reaction to his diagnosis in the essay,
“The Median Isn’t the Message.” We
recommend Dr. Gould’s essay for everyone who has been diagnosed with this
disease, or with any other form of cancer.
Dr. Gould’s experience certainly may not be standard, but his hopeful approach to his disease cannot be discounted.
Mesothelioma Prognosis: Conclusion
As you can see, there are a number of factors
that can impact the determination of a mesothelioma
prognosis. The biologic facts of the disease as presented
and the individual characteristics of the patient are all
important co-factors and have serious implications for
overall prognosis. Along with these factors, improving
treatment regimens are another major element in one’s
prognosis. There is still no cure for mesothelioma, but the
treatments are improving, as is our knowledge of the actual
mechanisms of the disease itself. Doctors are hopeful that
we can translate our growing knowledge of the disease into
more effective treatments and, therefore, better prognoses
for patients.
To learn more about mesothelioma treatments, please follow this link:
mesothelioma treatments.
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