Pericardial Mesothelioma

Pericardial mesothelioma is a very rare cancerous disease of the tissue layers surrounding the heart. The mesothelium membrane is comprised of two layers, one that adheres to a moving internal organ such as the heart or lungs, and the other which forms a sac around the organ. The tissues secrete a lubricant that allows the active organ to move easily against adjacent structures, such as the rib cage and diaphragm. The peritoneum is the mesothelial layer that lines the abdominal cavity, the pleura lines the chest cavity, and the pericardium surrounds the heart. Abnormal growth (cancer) in the cells of any of these mesothelial structures is referred to as mesothelioma.

The primary cause of mesothelioma is exposure to asbestos in the workplace, even for brief periods, with symptoms sometimes taking up to 50 years after exposure to become apparent. Among the populations most effected by mesothelioma are miners who were employed in South Africa and Australia (including a large number of Italian immigrants), who often worked in dusty conditions without protective equipment. Among Americans and Europeans, most cases have arisen among those who worked with asbestos in the construction trades and shipbuilding, where asbestos was used extensively for its insulating properties and as a fire retardant. At this point, however, there is insufficient evidence to link pericardial mesothelioma to asbestos exposure. Similarly, smoking does not appear to be a risk factor for mesothelioma.

Pleural mesothelioma often spreads to the pericardium in its advanced stages. Primary pericardial mesothelioma (where the tumor starts in the pericardium) is rare, making up less than 1% of total mesothelioma cases. Histological types include epithelial, sarcomatous, and mixed.

In the history of medicine pericardial mesothelioma has also been called endothelioma, coelothelioma, and endothelial carcinoma. There are other types of pericardial tumors, but about half are mesothelioma. The others are usually sarcoma (angiosarcoma) and can be difficult to distinguish from sarcomatoid pericardical mesothelioma.

The disease occurs across all age groups, almost equally in both sexes. With the elimination of asbestos in many building products and an overall improvement in working conditions and health monitoring, it is likely that the overall incidence of mesothelioma will decline in the next decade or so. In the absence of the identification of a principle causative agent, it is less clear whether the incidence rate of primary pericardial mesothelioma will change.

Results from an extensive study of autopsy records from 500,000 people who had died from cancer showed that primary tumors of the pericardium were responsible in only 0.0022% of the cases. With respect to all pericardial and cardiac primary tumors, only 2 or 3 percent are associated with mesothelioma, well behind the numbers for angiosarcoma (33%) and rabdomyosarcoma (20%).

Symptoms

The symptoms are dyspnea and pain pleural effusion, inflammation of the pericardium (called pericarditis). A dangerous symptom is cardiac tamponade in which blood accumulates in the pericardium and can lower the heart’s pumping stroke volume. These symptoms are common to other forms of mesothelioma and to a number of other conditions affecting the heart and lungs, such as pneumonia and lung cancer. In many cases, symptoms are not apparent until the disease has progressed to advanced stages, leaving few options for effective treatment.

Diagnosis

While doctors can examine fluid from the pericardial cavity (similar to the examination of pleural effusion fluid in diagnosis of pleural mesothelioma), malignant cells are found only 30% of the time, which is another reason this cancer is so hard to diagnose. CT scans can sometimes reveal thickening of the pericardium and a tumor mass is visible, although less than half of the time. Diagnosis of pericardial mesothelioma often takes place when the disease is quite advanced, at a point when the tumor and associated swelling are constricting other thoracic structures such as veins, arteries and airways. Pericardial swelling can also be associated with tuberculosis, rheumatoid arthritis, and other conditions. There was even a recent Japanese report about a patient who appeared to have pericardial constriction, which later turned out to be mesothelioma. A British case report about a young man with pericardial mesothelioma that confounded doctors “illustrates the difficulty in establishing this diagnosis by echocardiography and computed tomography.”

Pericardial mesothelioma often can appear to be rheumatic fever, lupus erythematocous, and tuberculosis pericarditis.

Radiography and other imaging techniques (e.g., echocardiography and magnetic resonance angiography) can be used to demonstrate swelling of the pericardium. In some cases, the myocardium and coronary arteries might also be involved. Isotope scans with gallium or technetium as well as cardiac catheterization can be used to measure decreased function in the heart and blood vessels. Post-contrast computerized tomography can be used to differentiate the tumor mass from the rest of the swollen tissue surrounding the heart. However, even with the identification of a tumor, the use of imaging techniques alone will not result in a definitive diagnosis because melanoma, leukemia and lymphoma can also involve the pericardium. Precise diagnosis requires demonstrating that the tumor has no relationship with the pleural surfaces.

Standard laboratory tests of blood, urine, and sputum are of little help in detecting mesothelioma. Liquid extracted from the swollen area can provide adequate cytological evidence for accurate diagnosis, but in some cases this method has resulted in a misdiagnosis, indicating other cancers (e.g., adenocarcinoma).

A biopsy carried out on a tissue sample obtained by thoracoscopy or sternoscopy is the only way to substantiate a positive identification of mesothelioma. In terms of specific laboratory indicators for the presence of mesothelioma, the cancer cells stain positive for cytokeratin, vimentin, epithelial membrane antigen, and calretinin and negative for CEA, CD15, CD34 and S-100. In 60 to 80 percent of cases, accurate diagnosis based on histological analysis of tissue samples is only accomplished after the death of the patient.

Treatment


The choice of treatment regimen is dependent on how far the cancer has progressed at the time a positive diagnosis is made, and is also be based on the age, weight, medical history, and general well-being of the patient.

With early detection, when the tumor mass is small and localized, radical surgery for removal of cancerous tissue is possible but risky, given the proximity to the heart and lungs. If the cancer has spread to the lymph nodes, lungs, chest wall, or other organs (as it does in 25 to 45 percent of cases), surgical removal is no longer an option.

A course of palliative surgery for draining fluid from the pericardium, as a means of relieving pressure on proximal structures, can be used to alleviate symptoms and as a way to obtain a tissue sample for biopsy. This procedure can be used to help prolong life while other treatment modalities are administered.

Radiation therapy can be used to kill the cancer cells and shrink tumors, but this approach carries with it the risk of damaging the heart and lungs. As well as the more familiar practice of external exposure to radioactive materials, treatment might involve delivering radioactive materials directly to the cancer site through plastic tubing (internal therapy).

No chemotherapeutic agents have been shown to be effective in the treatment of pericardial mesothelioma. There was a recent case report from India about success in one patient using a combination of pemetrexed and cisplatin, the same regimen used in treatment of pleural mesothelioma.

Prognosis

Although there are few cases of primary pericardial mesothelioma, it appears that the prognosis for this cancer is worse than it is for pleural or peritoneal mesothelioma. As a direct consequence of the difficulties in definitively diagnosing pericardial mesothelioma and the fact that it usually only minimally symptomatic until its advanced stages, the prognosis for patients is very poor, with a mean survival time of only six months following diagnosis. Death often occurs as the result of congestive heart failure or occlusion of the superior vena cava. This situation is unlikely to change without significant advances in early detection techniques and treatment regimens.