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Erschienen in: World Journal of Urology 11/2018

31.08.2018 | Topic Paper

Predictors of oncological outcomes in T1G3 patients treated with BCG who undergo radical cystectomy

verfasst von: Francesco Soria, Francesca Pisano, Paolo Gontero, J. Palou, S. Joniau, V. Serretta, S. Larré, S. Di Stasi, B. van Rhijn, J. A. Witjes, A. Grotenhuis, R. Colombo, A. Briganti, M. Babjuk, V. Soukup, P. U. Malmstrom, J. Irani, N. Malats, J. Baniel, R. Mano, T. Cai, E. Cha, P. Ardelt, J. Varkarakis, R. Bartoletti, G. Dalbagni, S. F. Shariat, E. Xylinas, R. J. Karnes, R. Sylvester

Erschienen in: World Journal of Urology | Ausgabe 11/2018

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Abstract

Purpose

To evaluate the oncological impact of postponing radical cystectomy (RC) to allow further conservative therapies prior to progression in a large multicentre retrospective cohort of T1-HG/G3 patients initially treated with BCG.

Methods

According to the time of RC, the population was divided into 3 groups: patients who did not progress to muscle-invasive disease, patients who progressed before radical cystectomy and patients who experienced progression at the time of radical cystectomy. Clinical and pathological outcomes were compared across the three groups.

Results

Of 2451 patients, 509 (20.8%) underwent RC. Patients with tumors > 3 cm or with CIS had earlier cystectomies (HR = 1.79, p = 0.001 and HR = 1.53, p = 0.02, respectively). Patients with tumors > 3 cm, multiple tumors or CIS had earlier T3/T4 or N + cystectomies. In patients who progressed, the timing of cystectomy did not affect the risk of T3/T4 or N + disease at RC. Patients with T3/T4 or N + disease at RC had a shorter disease-specific survival (HR = 4.38, p < 0.001), as did patients with CIS at cystectomy (HR = 2.39, p < 0.001). Patients who progressed prior to cystectomy had a shorter disease-specific survival than patients for whom progression was only detected at cystectomy (HR = 0.58, p = 0.024)

Conclusions

Patients treated with RC before experiencing progression to muscle-invasive disease harbor better oncological and survival outcomes compared to those who progressed before RC and to those upstaged at surgery. Tumor size and concomitant CIS at diagnosis are the main predictors of surgical treatment while tumor size, CIS and tumor multiplicity are associated with extravesical disease at surgery.
Literatur
15.
Metadaten
Titel
Predictors of oncological outcomes in T1G3 patients treated with BCG who undergo radical cystectomy
verfasst von
Francesco Soria
Francesca Pisano
Paolo Gontero
J. Palou
S. Joniau
V. Serretta
S. Larré
S. Di Stasi
B. van Rhijn
J. A. Witjes
A. Grotenhuis
R. Colombo
A. Briganti
M. Babjuk
V. Soukup
P. U. Malmstrom
J. Irani
N. Malats
J. Baniel
R. Mano
T. Cai
E. Cha
P. Ardelt
J. Varkarakis
R. Bartoletti
G. Dalbagni
S. F. Shariat
E. Xylinas
R. J. Karnes
R. Sylvester
Publikationsdatum
31.08.2018
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
World Journal of Urology / Ausgabe 11/2018
Print ISSN: 0724-4983
Elektronische ISSN: 1433-8726
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00345-018-2450-0

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