We analyzed the official yearly mortality data due to malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) from 1995 to 2002 in all 107 Italian
provinces, and we related them to provincial resident population in the same years. The resulting ratios are displayed as
geographically referenced maps, which enhance the visual impact on how that fatal disease distributes over the country. The
following results are statistically meaningful: (1) internal migration changed the Italian population distribution, with major
increases in regions Lombardy, Trentino–Alto Adige, Veneto, and Emilia–Romagna, and moderate decreases in Piemonte, Liguria,
and Friuli–Venezia Giulia. (2) MPM mortality is increasing overall, with five provinces largely exceeding the average Italian
rate: Alessandria (Piemonte), Genoa and La Spezia (Liguria), and Gorizia and Trieste (Friuli–Venezia Giulia). (3) There is
a substantial mortality rate increase in the same provinces which shows decreasing population. Results are discussed with
reference to well-known cases of asbestos-polluted sites such as Balangero and Casale Monferrato (Piemonte), Genoa and La
Spezia (Liguria), and Monfalcone and Trieste (Friuli–Venezia Giulia). General unquestionable conclusions are (a) occupational
exposure, especially working conditions, increases MPM mortality; (b) non-occupational exposure data are scattered, as are
male versus female data, and cannot be dealt with statistically on a nation-wide scale; (c) natural environmental exposure
may contribute to MPM mortality, but its effect is still statistically minor. The MPM mortality apex is currently reached
at Trieste, a province free of asbestos minerals occurring in their natural setting, but where MPM affects workers in the
marine industry strongly who operated in contact with insulating outfits. Information on content and type of amphibole present
in the asbestos materials used for industrial applications is scattered and generally scarce, thus making the evaluation of
the amphibole versus chrysotile relative impact on MPM mortality rates statistically unsound.
Keywords
Pleural mesothelioma - Asbestos - Amphibole asbestos - Epidemiology - Mineralogy