Abstract
In differentiating diffuse epithelial mesothelioma from metastatic adenocarcinoma in pleural and peritoneal biopsies, the number and form of microviHi and the amount and distribution of tonofiiaments are thought to be the most useful criteria. This report details 5 cases of diffuse epithelial mesothelioma in which the characteristic fine structural features of neoplastic mesothelial cells were markedly modified. The majority or all tumor cells were poorly differentiated in electron micrographs, particularly with reduced prominence or absence of intermediate filaments, desmo-somes, intracytoplasmic lumina, and microvilli. Im-munohistochemistry revealed the absence of carcinoembryonic antigen and the presence of cyto-keratin in all cases. Comparison with a better differentiated case suggests cytologic details that are useful in distinguishing the poorly differentiated type of epithelial mesotheliomas from adenocarcinoma. These include a mosaic pattern of closely associated tumor cells with a few long, narrow cytoplasmic processes lying parallel to adjacent plasma membranes, abundant cytoplasm with limited organelles usually having a polar arrangement, and nuclei with markedly disaggregated chromatin and prominent nucleolonemal-type nuclei.