Title: Distinction between pleural mesothelioma and pulmonary adenocarcinoma using MOC31 in an asbestos sprayer
Abstract: Asbestos exposure may cause asbestosis, pleural plaques and benign pleural disease, and may pre-dispose to malignant mesothelioma and other neoplasms. The occurrence to two primary tumours in the same patient is rare, and the appearance of a pleural mesothelioma and another lung tumour is exceptional. The present case report describes a patient who, by standard immunohistochemistry, was thought to have mesothelioma at pleuro-pneumonectomy, and adenocarcinoma in the other lung at post-mortem 5 months later. Subsequent investigation using the MOC31 antibody demonstrated a single pathology of adenocarcinoma of the lung. The additional use of this antibody has important histopathological and legal implications.