ASBESTOSIS AND ASBESTOSRELATED DISEASES
Asbestos causes diffuse pulmonary fibrosis (asbestosis), areas of pleural thickening that may calcify (plaques), and benign exudative pleural effusions. Asbestos exposure is associated with increased risk for bronchogenic carcinoma in tobacco smokers and for malignant pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma. The asbestos-related diseases are caused almost exclusively by occupational exposures, but asbestos also represents a significant risk for mesothelioma for the general population and for workers who contact the material through their jobs.
Asbestos is valuable for its great durability and its
thermal insulating properties. Asbestos is an abundant crystalline magnesium
silicate that occurs in pure natural deposits as a densely packed fiber. The
natural fiber can be crafted into sheets of insulating material, mixed as
insulation slurry for spraying or direct application on to walls or pipes,
mixed with concrete cement to strengthen it, woven into cloth with great fireresistant
properties, or manufactured into many other products in which durability and
resistance to friction are important. After a period of wide use in diverse
applications throughout the world during the middle of the twentieth century,
the use of asbestos has been largely eliminated in the industrialized nations
because of the health hazards from exposure; however, it is still mined,
milled, and used widely in many developing countries.
The crystal structure of asbestos is in the form of
long, thin fibers. Asbestos is divided into two mineral groups: the serpentine
and the amphibole. Chrysotile (serpentine) asbestos is a very long, white,
curly fiber that was used extensively for insulation and cloth. The amphibole
asbestos types amosite (brown asbestos) and crocidolite (blue
asbestos) have shorter, straight fibers and are particularly valued for their
durability.
Exposure to asbestos occurs primarily through
breathing airborne fibers into the lungs, and inhaled asbestos is clearly
harmful if the dose is sufficient. Workers in all phases of asbestos production
and installation experienced very high levels of exposure until the 1960s or
1970s because the health hazards were not recognized or were not publicized.
Measures to control airborne fiber levels and then to reduce or eliminate the
use of asbestos were implemented during the 1970s and 1980s. Levels of asbestos
exposure sufficient to cause all types of asbestos-related diseases were
experienced by asbestos miners and millers and by workers manufacturing
asbestos cement, insulation products, paper, brake pads, friction products, and
similar materials. Commercial ship builders constructing new or renovated
vessels during and after World War II experienced very high levels of asbestos
exposure. Insulation workers, steam boiler makers, plumbers, and others in the
construction trades were exposed to asbestos as they applied the material to
walls, ceilings, pipes, and many other surfaces that needed heat protection.
Installed asbestos can still represent a health hazard to workers who are
employed in these buildings or who maintain, renovate, or demolish them. All of
the diseases caused by asbestos have very long delay periods (latency, lag
time) between the exposure and the clinical illness, and no acute or short-term
toxic effects of asbestos are known.
ASBESTOSIS
High levels of exposure to asbestos cause diffuse pulmonary
fibrosis known as asbestosis. The clinical, radiographic, and pathologic
features of asbestosis are nearly identical to those of idiopathic pulmonary
fibrosis (IPF; cryptogenic fibrosing alveolitis). The symptoms are slowly
progressive shortness of breath on exertion and a dry cough. Physical findings include
high-pitched end-inspiratory crackles (dry rales) at the lung bases and digital
clubbing in about half of the patients. Pulmonary function tests show a
restrictive physiology with hypoxemia that worsens on exertion. The findings on
chest radiograph are small irregular opacities at the periphery of the lung
with a lower lung zone pre- dominance. High-resolution computed tomography
(HRCT) scans show thickening of subpleural septal and interlobular lines,
curvilinear lines, and nonseptal linear opacities. Honeycomb cystic changes and traction
bronchiectasis become apparent with more advanced disease.
The lung pathology of asbestosis is similar or identical
to that of IPF and features the changes characterized as “usual interstitial
pneumonitis,” but the key distinguishing feature is the presence of abundant
asbestos fibers or asbestos bodies. If the fibers are amphibole asbestos, many
may become coated with protein and iron to become “asbestos bodies” or
“ferruginous bodies,” golden-red refractile fibers with beads or cylinders of
protein. If the fibers are chrysotile, then few if any asbestos bodies form. The
asbestos bodies can be stained blue with iron stains and are visible by light
microscopy; smaller or uncoated fibers can be found by transmission electron
microscopy.
Asbestosis (pulmonary fibrosis caused by asbestos)
develops only after very high levels of exposure and only appears decades (10-50 years) after exposure
began and often after the exposure ended. Thus, workers with abnormal chest
radiographs who have had only recent or brief exposure to asbestos are very
unlikely to have asbestosis. The diagnosis of asbestosis rests on an
appropriate asbestos exposure history, a suitable time interval between
exposure and disease, basilar crackles on chest examination, and compatible
radiographic changes. Lung tissue biopsy is usually not needed unless the
exposure history is uncertain. There is no treatment for asbestosis other than
supportive care. The prevalence of pulmonary fibrosis caused by asbestos has
increased progressively but may have peaked in developed countries where
asbestos use has been curtailed or banned for 25 years. It is expected that
current exposure levels in the industrialized countries will be far below the
threshold needed to cause pulmonary fibrosis.
BENIGN ASBESTOS-RELATED PLEURAL DISEASE
Asbestos causes several manifestations of disease in
the pleural space surrounding the lung. All are believed to be related to the
transport of fibers from the epithelial and interstitial spaces through the
centrifugal lymphatics to the visceral pleura and across the pleural space to
the parietal pleura. The most common clinical manifestation of asbestos
exposure is pleural plaques. These lesions are benign fibrous deposits in
and beneath the parietal pleura, most commonly on the lower costal and
diaphragmatic surfaces of the chest. Pleural plaques seen in profile on the
plain chest radiograph appear as dense linear thickening of the pleural surface
several millimeters deep and several centimeters long. Pleural plaques may show
dystrophic calcification that appears in profile as thin dense lines along the
pleural surface. HRCT scanning demonstrates plaques easily, and areas of
thickening or calcifications can often be found when the plain chest radiograph
is normal. The plaques may appear 20 to 50 years after initial asbestos
exposure and gradually increase in size and extent of calcification. Plaques
require less exposure than asbestosis or other pleural manifestations. Pleural
plaques alone cause no significant symptoms and little or no pulmonary function
impairment; they require no treatment. Bilateral lower lung zone calcified
pleural plaques are virtually pathognomonic of asbestos exposure and thus may
serve as confirmation of a significant occupational exposure history.
Moderate asbestos exposure is associated with an
exudative or serosanguineous benign pleural effusion in a small fraction
of workers. This manifestation of asbestos-related pleural disease may be seen
relatively early after exposure and often occurs before plaques or fibrosis is
apparent. The main issue with a benign asbestos-related pleural effusion is
usually the concern that it may represent a mesothelioma; extensive testing may
be needed to prove that it does not. Rarely, asbestos can cause diffuse pleural
thickening that leads to clinically significant restrictive lung disease. Areas
of pleural thickening can lead to entrapment of the subadjacent lung tissue to cause a site of “rounded atelectasis.”
ASBESTOS-RELATED MALIGNANCY
Exposure to asbestos is associated with increased risks for two types of malignancy: mesothelioma in non-smokers and smokers and bronchogenic carcinoma in smokers. The frequency of both cancer types increases with higher asbestos exposure levels, and both may be seen at doses that do not cause asbestosis or benign pleural disease. Malignant mesothelioma of the pleura or the peritoneum is a locally aggressive and invasive mesothelial cancer that occurs very rarely in the general population (fewer than one case per 100,000 per year) but is found with greatly increased frequency among individuals exposed to asbestos. The risk appears to be greater for exposure to crocidolite than to chrysotile. Patients with localized mesothelioma may sometimes respond to aggressive surgery or to chemotherapy, but for most patients, the median survival time remains short (8-14 months from diagnosis), and the mortality rate is high. The prevalence of mesothelioma has risen dramatically in the past 20 years and may now be reaching a peak that will decline in parallel with reduced asbestos use and exposure.
Workers who received substantial asbestos exposure and
who smoked tobacco are at greatly increased risk of developing bronchogenic
carcinoma compared with smokers who did not have asbestos exposure. Individuals
who never smoked tobacco but had moderate to heavy asbestos exposure appear to
be at slightly increased relative risk (1.5- to 2.5-fold) of developing lung
cancer compared with nonexposed nonsmokers, but the absolute risk is still low.
The clinical presentation, radiographic features, anatomic location, frequency
of pathologic categories, and treatment of lung cancer with asbestos exposure
appear to be similar to those for the
general population.