Chromosomal abnormalities and their correlations with asbestos exposure and survival in patients with mesothelioma

Abstract
Cytogenetic findings of our 30 previously reported and eight new patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma were summarised and correlated with asbestos fibre burden in lung tissue and survival. Successful cytogenetic analyses were performed on cells obtained from the tumours and/or pleural effusions of 34 of the 38 patients. Clonal chromosomal abnormalities were detected in 25 patients, 19 of them studied before treatment. Nine patients, seven of them studied before treatment, had normal karyotypes and/or non-clonal chromosomal abnormalities. Most of the karyotypic findings in the patients with clonal abnormalities were complex and heterogeneous, and no chromosome aberration specific to mesothelioma could be demonstrated. The following numerical abnormalities in decreasing order of frequency were preferentially present in karyotypic changes: -22, +7, -1, -3, -9, +11 and -14 (-/+ denoting partial or total loss or gain). Translocations and deletions involving a breakpoint at 1p11-p22 were the most frequent structural aberrations. Statistically significant correlations were found between high content of asbestos fibres in lung tissue and partial or total losses of chromosomes 1 and 4, and a breakpoint at 1p11-p22 (P = 0.0001, P = 0.003, P = 0.009, respectively). The number of copies of chromosome 7 short arms was inversely correlated with survival (P = 0.02). In this study no diagnostic cytogenetic markers of mesothelioma were found, instead the copy number of chromosome 7 short arms turned out to be a possible prognostic factor in malignant mesothelioma.