Asbestos-related lung disease

Cards (30)

  • What is asbestos-related lung disease?

    Spectrum of pulmonary disorders (inc. benign pleural diseases (pleural plaques, diffuse pleural thickening & asbestos pleurisy) and malignant conditions (lung carcinoma & mesothelioma))
    Arise from exposure to asbestos fibres
  • What is the pathophysiology of asbestos-related lung disease?

    Inhalation of asbestos fibres → fibres reach distal airways & lodge in the terminal bronchioles & alveolimacrophages phagocytose fibres but fail to eliminate them → inflammatory responsefibrosis
  • Asbestos can cause a variety of lung diseases from benign pleural plaques to mesothelioma
  • What are pleural plaques?

    Benign & do not undergo malignant changes
    Most common form of asbestos-related lung disease
  • Asbestos exposure can cause diffuse pleural thickening in a similar pattern as empyema or haemothorax.
  • What is asbestosis?

    Asbestosis is a chronic lung disease caused by inhaling asbestos fibers, leading to fibrosis (typically in lower lobes) and difficulty breathing.
  • Severity of asbestosis is related to length of exposure.
  • What are the features of asbestosis?
    Dyspnoea
    Reduced exercise tolerance
    Clubbing
    Bilateral end-inspiratory crackles
    Lung function tests -> restrictive pattern w/reduced gas transfer
  • What is mesothelioma?

    Malignant disease of pleura
    Rare & aggressive cancer
  • What is shown in the image?
    Mesothelioma
  • What is shown in the image?
    Pleural plaques
  • What is the management of pleural plaques?

    Keep an eye on plaques to ensure they don't become an issue (malignancy)
  • Pathophys of asbestosis
    Asbestos fibres inhaled → deposit at alveolar duct bifurcation → activate alveolar macrophages → release cytokines (TNF, IL-1b, ROS, RNS) → initiate fibrosis (typically in lower lobes, then tends to progress up) → loss of elasticitydifficulty breathing
  • What is shown in the image?
    Asbestosis -> lower zone linear interstitial fibrosis (progressively involves whole lung)
  • What are the investigations for asbestosis?

    CXR (PA & lateral) -> lower zone linear interstitial fibrosis (progressively involves whole lung)
    CT chest -> more sensitive than CXR
    Pulmonary function tests -> non-specific
  • What are the DDx of asbestosis?

    Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
    Connective tissue disease
    Hypersensitivity pneumonitis (HP)
    Hard metal lung disease
    Silicosis
    Sarcoidosis
    Medication or radiation-related pulmonary fibrosis
  • What are the RFs of asbestosis?

    Asbestos exposure
    Smoking (weak RF)
  • What are the signs & symptoms of asbestosis?

    SOB on exertion
    Dry, non-productive cough
    Crackles (initially heard at bases, increases with disease progression)
    Clubbing (advanced)
  • What is the treatment & management of asbestosis?

    No treatment to reverse/prevent progression
    Smoking cessation
    Pulmonary rehabilitation -> to reduce symptoms & optimise functional status
    O2 therapy -> pts with low O2 sats
    Lung transplants -> pts with end-stage resp failure
    Pleural decortication -> removal of fibrous tissue or thickened pleura (rare)
  • What is mesothelioma?

    Malignant disease of the pleura
    Rare & aggressive cancer
  • Pathophys of mesothelioma
    Inhalation of asbestos fibres → fibres resistant to phagocytosis (persist in parenchyma) → lodged fibres cause chronic irritation & inflam of mesotheliumfibrosis
    Asbestos activates macrophages & mesothelial cells → release of ROS & RNSDNA damageinflam cytokines released (TNF-a) → promotes cell proliferationcumulative genetic mutationsuncontrolled cell growthdysplasia & malignant transformationlocally invasive → may travel to distant organs (contralateral lung, liver, adrenal glands, kidneys) via lymph/blood
  • What are the investigations of mesothelioma?

    CXR -> unilateral pleural effusion, irregular pleural thickening, reduced lung volumes and/or parenchymal changes related to asbestos
    CT of chest & upper abdomen -> pleural thickening, pleural and/or pericardial effusion, enlarged hilar and/or mediastinal lymph nodes
    Pleural biopsy
  • What is shown in the image?
    CXR of mesothelioma
  • What is shown in the image?
    CT of mesothelioma
  • What happens when a CXR has findings suggestive of mesothelioma?

    2 week wait referral
  • What are the DDx of mesothelioma?

    Benign reactive mesothelial hyperplasia
    Benign asbestos-related pleural reactions
    Non-small cell lung cancer
    Small cell lung cancer
    Metastatic cancer
  • What are the RFs for mesothelioma?

    Asbestos exposure
    Age 60-85 (due to latency period between exposure & development of malignant mesothelioma)
    Male
    Radiation exposure
    Genetic predisposition (FHx)
    Smoking
  • What are the signs & symptoms of mesothelioma?

    SOB
    Weight loss
    Fever
    Night sweats
    Chest wall pain
    Clubbing
    Cough
    Diminished breath sounds
    Dullness to percussion
  • What is the treatment & management of mesothelioma?

    No standard treatment
    Chemotherapy/immunotherapy -> to improve QoL & survival
    Surgery (if operable)
  • Mesothelioma has a poor prognosis. Mean survival = 12 months