Mesothelioma Survival Rate

Mesothelioma survival rate refers to the proportion of people with a certain type and stage of mesothelioma who survive for a specified period of time after diagnosis. Most of these statistics cover the five-year survival.

There are no national statistics available for different stages of cancer or treatments that people have received. The statistics presented here are from a variety of references, including the views and experience of experts. These statistics are a general guide and can not be considered more than that.

For cancer, the result depends on advancing cancer at diagnosis. In general, cancer statistics are given for each stage and the stage is as important for mesothelioma than other types of cancer. For mesothelioma, the search for statistics is more difficult to do because, although the incidence is increasing, mesothelioma is not common. Normally, people have no symptoms at the outset and are therefore not see a doctor in the first line of ETEP cancer.

After page of detailed information on the survival of different stages of mesothelioma. These statistics are averages based on large numbers of patients. They can not predict exactly what will happen to patients. No patients are identical and the response to treatment also varies from person to person.

The prognosis may ask the doctor. However, even the doctor can not know for sure what will happen to the patient. It can use the term “5-year survival.” This is the proportion of people in research studies that are still alive five years after diagnosis.

For both types of mesothelioma (pleural and peritoneal mesothelioma), patients often say they have less than a year to live. However, experts working in major cancer centers around the world, often report better statistics than that based on clinical trials are underway.

Overall, of all people with mesothelioma only about 1 in 10 (10%) were still alive three years later and 1 in 20 (5%) are alive five years later. For those who have been diagnosed and treated in the early stages of the disease, there is little information to exploit. But the reports we have seen that the survival estimates up to 1 in every 2 (50%) after two years. Therefore, the range of survival times is very broad. Survival depends on the stage and other factors. These are the main things that impact mesothelioma survival rate:

• Stage of mesothelioma
• Size of the tumor
• If the tumor can be completely removed by surgery
• The amount of fluid in the chest or abdomen
• The age and general health
• The type of cancer cells and its appearance under the microscope
• If the patient has been diagnosed with mesothelioma and long ago.

Although there are the results of a number of tests available, which are often very small studies with fewer than 20 patients or more.

In the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, doctors followed 120 patients with different types of pleural mesothelioma from 1980 to 1995. All patients were treated with surgery to remove the lung and pleura (pleural pneumonectomy), followed by a combination of chemotherapy and radiotherapy with or without immunotherapy. 54 of 120 (45%) of patients in these trials were Alive 2 years late and 26,120 (22%) patients were alive five years later.

Patients with epithelioid-type tumors and cancer in the lymph nodes has a much better image. Nearly 3 in 4 (74%) were alive two years later and more than 1 in 3 (39%) still alive 5 years later.

Another study of survival of mesothelioma in a region of northwest Italy. This is called a population study. The researchers examined the records of all persons with the disease in a given area. This study of an area with a total population of 4.5 million Europeans. Studies have yielded similar results. One year after diagnosis, on average, 1 in 4 (24%) with pleural mesothelioma and 1 to 3 people (34%) with peritoneal mesothelioma were alive. Another study showed survival rates for each year after being diagnosed with mesothelioma in the following manner, the survival rate:
- Year 1: 39 percent
- Year 2: 20 percent
- Year 3: 11 percent
- Year 4: 10 percent
- Year 5: 9 percent.

Written on January 16th, 2012 with comments disabled.
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