Journal Article Page
Jump to
European Urology
Volume 62, issue 4, pages e69-e82, October 2012Urothelial Cancer
Stage-Specific Impact of Tumor Location on Oncologic Outcomes in Patients With Upper and Lower Tract Urothelial Carcinoma Following Radical Surgery
Accepted 5 February 2012, Published online 15 February 2012, pages 677 - 684
Full Text Full-Text PDF (1,3 MB) Create Platinum Slide Series
Abstract
Background
Dissimilarities in management and outcomes exist between upper tract urothelial carcinoma (UTUC) and urothelial carcinoma of the bladder (UCB).
Objective
The aim of this study was to analyze the stage-specific impact of upper or lower urinary tract tumor location on oncologic outcomes.
Design, setting, and participants
Data were collected from 4335 patients with UCB treated with radical cystectomy (RC) and bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy (PLND), 877 patients with ureteral UTUC, and 1615 with pelvicalyceal UTUC treated with radical nephroureterectomy (RNU). No patient received preoperative chemotherapy or radiation therapy.
Interventions
Patients were treated with RC and bilateral PLND or RNU.
Measurements
Outcomes were assessed according to primary tumor location.
Results and limitations
Compared to UTUC patients, UCB patients had more advanced tumor stage and higher grade, and they were more likely to harbor lymphovascular invasion (LVI) and lymph node metastasis (p < 0.001). In non–muscle-invasive tumor stages, UCB patients were more likely to experience disease recurrence and mortality compared to renal pelvicalyceal tumor patients (p < 0.002) but not ureteral tumors (p > 0.05). In pT2 and pT3 tumors, there was no difference in outcomes between the three tumor locations. In pT4 tumors, patients with ureteral and pelvicalyceal tumors were more likely to experience disease recurrence and mortality compared to UCB patients (p < 0.004). These stage-specific findings were unchanged after adjustment for the effects of age, gender, tumor grade, LVI, lymph node status, and adjuvant chemotherapy. This study is limited by its retrospective and multicenter nature.
Conclusions
Stage-specific differences in outcomes exist between UCB and UTUC. The differentially worse outcomes by stage between UCB and UTUC patients underline the differences between both cancer entities and the need for individualized stage-specific management for each patient.
Keywords: Bladder cancer, Upper tract urothelial carcinoma, Transitional cell carcinoma, Radical cystectomy, Radical nephroureterectomy, Prognosis, Survival.
Recommend this article
Currently this article has a rating of 1. Please log in to recommend it.
Copyright ©