Discussion
Diagnosis With Brief Discussion
- Diagnosis
- Malignant mesothelioma, sarcomatous type
- Radiologic Findings
- Fig.1-2. CT shows fluid collection with pleural thickening and calcification at Rt. posterolateral costophrenic sulcus, suggesting old empyema change.
Fig. 3-5. CT obtained 2 months after initial CT shows further enlargement of empyema on the Rt. posterolateral costophrenic sulcus with bulging-out through intercostal space underneath serratus posterior muscle. Previously noted calcification is indefinite. Lung parenchyma seems to be infiltrated by the pleural lesion.
The patient had been underwent empyectomy and right lower lobectomy. On gross specimen, multiple well-demarcated solid nodules are seen, mainly involving the pleural surface and scattered within the lung parenchyma. Pathologic diagnosis was sarcomatous type malignant mesothelioma with involvement of attached ribs and lung parenchyma.
- Brief Review
- In the presence of pleural thickening, the most useful features for differentiation of malignancy in pleural diseases are the presence of a pleural rind, pleural nodularity, thickening greater than 1 cm, and mediastinal pleural involvement. Pleural calcification and subpleural soft tissue hypertrophy in fat tissue density is important CT finding for benign diseases.
Chronic empyema can cause a malignancy appearing some decades later and the majority of which are squamous cell carcinomas. Lymphoma, round-cell sarcoma, adenocarcinoma and malignant mesothelioma also have been reported. Radiologic findings suggesting the occurrence of malignancy are; increased radiopacity in the thoracic cavity, soft-tissue bulging and/or unsharpness of fat planes in the chest walls, destruction of bone near the empyema, and extensive medial deviation of the calcified pleurae. CT clearly delineated masses with soft-tissue attenuation.
Every radiologist should know this entity in observation of chest radiographs obtained in patients with chronic empyema, and further radiologic assessment and aggressive biopsy are recommended if malignancy is suspected.
- References
- 1. Metintas M. et al. Computed tomography features in malignant pleural mesothelioma and other commonly seen pleural diseases. European Journal of Radiology 2002;41:1?9
2. Minami M. et al. Malignancy associated with chronic empyema: radiologic assessment. Radiology 1991;178(2):417-23
3. Hillerdal G. et al. Malignant mesothelioma secondary to chronic inflammation and old scars. Two new cases and review of the literature. Cancer 1985;55(9):1968-72.
4. Smith R. et al. Pleural mesothelioma presenting initially as empyema. Diagnostic Cytopatholog 2003;29:119-121
- Keywords
- Pleura, Malignant tumor,