Abstract

ObjectivesThe separation of benign from malignant mesothelial proliferations and exact subclassification of mesothelioma subtypes is crucial to determining patient care and prognosis but morphologically can be very difficult. MethodsThis session of the 2018 IMIG meeting addressed these problems. ResultsA new immunohistochemical marker, methylthioadenosine phosphorylase, was shown to correlate well with CDKN2A FISH and is cheaper and faster to run. A 117 gene expression panel also provided good separation on both tissue biopsy and cytology samples. Review of a series of mesotheliomas thought to be biphasic produced only a moderate level of agreement among expert pathologists with some cases being classified as purely epithelioid or sarcomatoid; these classifications had prognostic significance. The entity called transitional mesothelioma was found to behave exactly like sarcomatoid mesothelioma. RNA-seq analysis of a large series of mesotheliomas from a public database showed that, genetically, the morphologic breakdown into epithelioid, sarcomatoid, or biphasic mesotheliomas is artificial because there is a continuous spectrum of genomic changes. There are now criteria for the diagnosis of mesothelioma in situ and this is potentially important, since such cases might be curable. ConclusionsThis session documented new morphological and molecular approaches to separating benign from malignant mesothelial proliferations and to subclassifying malignant mesoteheliomas in clinical relevant ways.

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