A median survival time of about 9 months is generally reported among malignant pleural mesothelioma cases. Recently, better results in terms of survival and performance status have been reported in clinical trials that included highly selected patients. We describe the survival of pleural mesothelioma patients and the factors predictive of survival in an unselected, population-based setting. Pleural mesothelioma cases (4,100) registered from 1990 to 2001 by 9 Italian regional mesothelioma registries contributing to the network of the National Mesothelioma Registry were followed until December 31, 2005. Univariate (Kaplan-Meier) and multivariate (Cox proportional hazards regression) analyses of survival were carried out according to selected individual characteristics, including limited information on treatment in a subset of 578 cases. The median survival time was 9.8 months (95% confidence interval: 9.4-10.1). In multivariate analysis, younger age at diagnosis and epithelioid histotype were associated with significantly reduced hazard ratios. Positive effects of gender (women) and being diagnosed in a hospital with a thoracic surgery unit were of border-line statistical significance. No association with calendar period of diagnosis or asbestos exposure was present. Treatment was not associated with a statistically significant improvement in survival. This is the largest population-based study on survival in patients with pleural mesothelioma to date. Age and morphology were the main prognostic factors. Results regarding the effect of treatment were disappointing but may be useful to assess the future impact, at the population level, of recently introduced therapies.
In order to examine the relationship between wood dust and sino-nasal cancer, data from 12 case-control studies conducted in seven countries were pooled and reanalyzed. The relative risks associated with wood-related jobs and with exposure to wood dust, measured using a job exposure matrix based on occupation and industry titles, were examined using logistic regression. The combined data set consisted of 680 male cases, 2,349 male controls, 250 female cases, and 787 female controls. A high risk of adenocarcinoma among men was associated with employment in wood-related occupations (odds ratio [OR] = 13.5, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 9.0-20.0) and the risk was greatest among men who had been employed in jobs with the highest wood dust exposure (OR = 45.5, 95% CI = 28.3-72.9) and increased with duration of exposure. The risk of adenocarcinoma also appeared elevated among women employed in wood-related jobs (OR = 2.5, 95% CI = 0.5-12.3), but the small number of exposed cases precluded detailed analysis. Women in wood dust-exposed jobs appeared to have an excess of squamous cell carcinoma (OR = 2.1, 95% CI = 0.8-5.5) which increased with duration of exposure. An increased risk of squamous cell carcinoma in men was seen only among those employed for 30 or more years in jobs with exposure to fresh wood (OR = 2.4, 95% CI = 1.1-5.0). The results of this analysis provide strong support to the association between exposure to wood dust in a variety of occupations and the risk of sino-nasal adenocarcinoma and are consistent with the results of individual participating studies, although the magnitude of the excess risk varied. The evidence in regard to squamous cell carcinomas was ambiguous and there was a great deal of heterogeneity observed in individual study results. This may be due to differences in risk associated with exposure to hardwoods and softwoods or with other, as yet to be identified, aspects of exposure.
Due to the large scale use of asbestos (more than 3.5 million tons produced or imported until its definitive banning in 1992), a specific national surveillance system of mesothelioma incident cases is active in Italy, with direct and individual anamnestic etiological investigation. In the period between 1993 and 2004, a case-list of 8,868 pleural MM was recorded by the Italian National Register (ReNaM) and the modalities of exposure to asbestos fibres have been investigated for 6,603 of them. Standardized incidence rates are 3.49 (per 100,000 inhabitants) for men and 1.25 for women, with a wide regional variability. Occupational asbestos exposure was in 69.3% of interviewed subjects (N 5 4,577 cases), while 4.4% was due to cohabitation with someone (generally, the husband) occupationally exposed, 4.7% by environmental exposure from living near a contamination source and 1.6% during a leisure activity. In the male group, 81.5% of interviewed subjects exhibit an occupational exposure. In the exposed workers, the median year of first exposure was 1957, and mean latency was 43.7 years. The analysis of exposures by industrial sector focuses on a decreasing trend for those traditionally signaled as ''at risk'' (asbestos-cement industry, shipbuilding and repair and railway carriages maintenance) and an increasing trend for the building construction sector. The systematic mesothelioma surveillance system is relevant for the prevention of the disease and for supporting an efficient compensation system. The existing experience on all-too-predictable asbestos effects should be transferred to developing countries where asbestos use is spreading.Key words: asbestos, mesothelioma, pleural, national register, Italy ReNaM Working Group: Massari S., Branchi C.; Detragiache E.; Merletti F., Gangemi M., Stura A., Brentisci C., Cammarieri Diglio G., Macerata V., Gilardetti M.; Lazzarotto A., Benfatto L., Bianchelli M., Mazzucco G.; Sieno C., Pesatori A.C.; Gioffrè F., Bressan V.; De Michieli P.; Mangone L., Storchi C.; Seniori Costantini A., Badiali A.M., Cacciarini V., Giovannetti L., Martini A.; Calisti R.; La Rosa F., Stracci F., D'Alò D.; Perucci C.A., Forastiere F., Cavariani F., Ascoli V., Sangalli M.; Trafficante L., Gatta S.; Menegozzo M., Izzo F., Canfora M.L., Santoro M., Viscardi F.; Massaro T.; Convertini L.; Leotta A., Lio S.G.; Dardanoni G., Scondotto S.; Corrias G.A., Angius M.R., Nieddu V.
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