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European Urology
Volume 49, issue 1, pages 1-208, January 2006Reviews
Lymph Node Metastasis in Bladder Cancer
Accepted 24 August 2005, Published online 8 September 2005, pages 13 - 21
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Abstract
Objective
We reviewed the literature on nodal staging in patients with bladder cancer treated with radical cystectomy and lymphadenectomy.
Results
Fractionating the lymph node specimen significantly increases the node count, whereas results are contradictory as to whether that increase improves detection of positive nodes. Pathoanatomic data indicate that extending lymph node dissection to the aortic bifurcation improves nodal staging. That approach might be beneficial, especially in cases of T3/T4a tumours, which more often have lymph node metastases above the iliac bifurcation as compared to less advanced tumours. In node-negative patients, extended lymph node dissection probably removes undetected micrometastases and thereby increases disease-free survival. Four studies suggested that a minimum of 8, 10, 10–14, and 16 nodes must be removed, to improve survival, and in another investigation aortic bifurcation was proposed as the upper limit for dissection. Some patients with positive nodes can be cured by surgery alone, even those with gross adenopathy. There is no evidence that extended lymphadenectomy increases surgery-related morbidity. The TNM classification is apparently insufficient for stratifying node-positive patients because several larger cystectomy series could not verify differences in survival between N groups.
Conclusions
Fractionating the lymphadenectomy specimen increases the lymph node count. In node-negative patients, more meticulous and extended lymph node dissection (8–16 nodes or to the aortic bifurcation) probably improves disease-free survival by removing undetected micrometastases. Patients with positive lymph nodes should also be offered radical cystectomy.
Keywords: Bladder cancer, Lymphadenectomy, Lymph node metastasis.
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