Mesothelioma Stages
The staging system most often used for mesothelioma is the Butchart
system. This system is based mainly on the extent of the primary
tumor mass, and divides mesotheliomas into stages I through IV.
Butchart Staging System
Stage I: Mesothelioma is present within the right
or left pleura, and may also involve the lung, pericardium, or diaphragm
(the muscle separating the chest from the abdomen) on the same side.
Stage II: Mesothelioma invades the chest wall
or involves the esophagus (food passage connecting the throat to
the stomach), heart, or pleura on both sides. The lymph nodes in
the chest may also be involved.
Stage III: Mesothelioma has penetrated through
the diaphragm into the peritoneum (lining of the abdominal cavity).
Lymph nodes beyond those in the chest may also be involved.
Stage IV: There is evidence of distant metastases (spread through
the bloodstream to other organs).
Another staging system has recently been developed by the American
Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC). This is a TNM system, similar
to staging systems used for most other cancers. T stands for tumor
(its size and how far it has spread to nearby organs), N stands
for spread to lymph nodes and M is for metastasis (spread to distant
organs). In TNM staging, information about the tumor, lymph nodes,
and metastasis is combined in a process called stage grouping to
assign a stage described by Roman numerals from I to IV. Minor differences
exist between the AJCC TNM staging system and the Butchart staging
system.
TNM Staging System
Stage I: Mesothelioma involves the right or left
pleura. It may also have spread into the lung, pericardium, or diaphragm
on the same side. It has not yet spread to the lymph nodes.
Stage II: Mesothelioma has spread from the pleura
on one side to the nearby peribronchial and/or hilar lymph nodes
next to the lung on the same side. It may also have spread into
the lung, pericardium, or diaphragm on the same side.
Stage III: Mesothelioma has spread into the chest
wall muscle, ribs, heart, esophagus, or other organs in the chest
on the same side as the primary tumor, with or without spread to
subcarinal and/or mediastinal lymph nodes on the same side as the
main tumor. Subcarinal nodes are located at the point where the
windpipe branches to the left and right lungs. Mediastinal lymph
nodes are located in the space behind the chest bone in front of
the heart. Mesotheliomas with the same extent of local spread as
in stage II that have also spread to subcarinal and/or mediastinal
lymph nodes on the same side are also included in stage III.
Stage IV: Mesothelioma has spread into the lymph
nodes in the chest on the side opposite that of the primary tumor,
or directly extends to the pleura or lung on the opposite side,
or directly extends into the peritoneum, or directly extends into
organs in the abdominal cavity or neck. Any mesothelioma with evidence
of distant metastases (spread to other organs through the bloodstream)
or spread to organs beyond the chest or abdomen is included in this
stage.
Although the recently developed TNM classification is the most
detailed and precise, the original Butchart staging system is still
used most often to describe the spread of pleural mesotheliomas.
Understanding these staging systems for mesothelioma is important
both for estimating and better understanding prognosis, and also
for assessing therapeutic options.
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