Background: This study evaluates clinical, radiological and histopathological prognostic indicators for survival of patients undergoing cytoreductive surgery and perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy for diffuse malignant peritoneal mesothelioma (DMPM).
Methods: Sixty-two consecutive patients with DMPM underwent cytoreduction and perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy at the Washington Cancer Institute. Twenty-six clinical, radiological and histopathological parameters were analyzed in univariate and multivariate analyses using overall survival as an endpoint.
Results: The overall survival was 79 months (range 1-143 months), with 1-, 3- and 5-year survival rates of 84%, 58% and 50%, respectively. The following 14 prognostic variables were significant for survival in the univariate analysis: gender (P = .045), peritoneal cancer index (P = .038), completeness of cytoreduction score (P = .010), interpretive CT findings of the small bowel and mesentery (P = .001), mesothelioma cell type (P < .001), mesothelioma nuclear size (P < .001), nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio (P < .001), mitotic count (P < .001), atypical mitosis (P < .001), chromatin pattern (P < .001), cellular necrosis (P < .001), perineural invasion (P = .037), stroma pattern (P < .001) and depth of invasion (P = .014). In the multivariate analysis, the only factor that was independently associated with an improved survival after cytoreduction and perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy was mesothelioma nuclear size.
Conclusions: Mesothelioma nuclear size was the dominant factor determining overall survival in patients with DMPM. A histopathological staging system based on measurement of the nuclear size was proposed.