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Ulster Med J. 2008 September; 77(3): 145.
PMCID: PMC2604468
Asbestos, mesothelioma and the legacy of shipbuilding in Belfast
Patrick J Morrison, Honorary Editor
 
In 1935, just 23 years after the Titanic sank (figure 1), Campbell and Young reported a cluster of three cases of ‘mixed cell sarcomas’ of the pleura in the Ulster Medical Journal1. There was no occupational, social or family history listed, but all three cases were re-analysed in 1996 with modern immunohistochemical techniques and shown conclusively to be mesotheliomas of the lung2. Two of the clinical photos (figure 2) are reproduced from the original article, and must be amongst the earliest pathological reported cases of mesothelioma. At that time, industrial or occupational exposure was not recognised3, but as the proportional mortality rate for asbestosis of former shipyard workers is sixteen times that of the average of other occupations, the legacy of Belfast's position as a world famous high output shipyard has ensured that far more people will die of asbestos induced diseases than the total number of individuals who died in shipwrecks such as the Titanic, in the last century or from occupational injuries sustained in manufacturing ships.
Fig 1Fig 1
Passengers strolling on the boat deck of the Titanic.
Fig 2Fig 2
Left: ‘Radiogram… showing large nodular growths in pleura’; Right: ‘coronal section …of mixed-cell sarcoma of the pleura’. [From the original figures 2 and 3 of reference 1].

In this issue of the journal, Professor John Hedley-Whyte reprises the contribution of shipbuilding in World War II as a significant aetiology of the malignancies caused by asbestos and adds how US incendiary bombs containing asbestos possibly allowed air-raids to disseminate the risk even further4. With great irony, Belfast, of course was heavily bombed by the German Luftwaffe in 1941 mainly because of its strategic shipbuilding capacity, potentially increasing asbestos exposure to the local population through both destruction of buildings containing asbestos, and mass fires from the bombs.

We now know that mesothelioma can occur in the peritoneum and in other sites5 and there may be an associated genetic susceptibility to carriers of certain genes including neurofibromatosis type 26.

The one silver lining in the fire clouds of the Belfast blitz, as Hedley-Whyte comments, was that “parsimony of the UK Treasury was rendered moot and the Allied response overwhelming” thus triggering a series of events that eventually ended the war perhaps sooner than would have been otherwise.

REFERENCES
1.
Campbell, SBB; Young, JS. A primary tumour (mixed cell sarcoma) of the pleura. Ulster Med J. 1935;4(1):36–8.
2.
Logan, JS; Bharucha, H; Sloan, JM. Mesotheliomas all: long before their time. Ulster Med J. 1996;65(1):1–2. [PubMed]
3.
Elmes, PC. Investigation into the hazardous use of asbestos. Northern Ireland 1960-76. Ulster Med J. 1977;42(2):71–80. [PubMed]
4.
Hedley-Whyte, J; Milamed, DR. Asbestos and ship-building: fatal consequences. Ulster Med J. 2008;77(3):191–200. [PubMed]
5.
Kealey, WDC; Dace, S; Campbell, WJ; Moorehead, RJ. Peritoneal mesothelioma. Ulster Med J. 1993;63(2):163–5. [PubMed]
6.
Bruckner Holt, C; Farmer, AD; Syn, W; Townson, G. Mesothelioma – “not just in the chest” Ulster Med J. 2008;77(2):133–134. [PubMed]