Unaltered oncological outcomes of radical cystectomy with extended lymphadenectomy over three decades.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_1A08A57CA46F
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Unaltered oncological outcomes of radical cystectomy with extended lymphadenectomy over three decades.
Journal
BJU international
Author(s)
Zehnder P., Studer U.E., Skinner E.C., Thalmann G.N., Miranda G., Roth B., Cai J., Birkhäuser F.D., Mitra A.P., Burkhard F.C., Dorin R.P., Daneshmand S., Skinner D.G., Gill I.S.
ISSN
1464-410X (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1464-4096
Publication state
Published
Issued date
07/2013
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
112
Number
2
Pages
E51-8
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
To evaluate oncological outcome trends over the last three decades in patients after radical cystectomy (RC) and extended pelvic lymph node (LN) dissection.
Retrospective analysis of the University of Southern California (USC) RC cohort of patients (1488 patients) operated with intent to cure from 1980 to 2005 for biopsy confirmed muscle-invasive urothelial bladder cancer. To focus on outcomes of unexpected (cN0M0) LN-positive patients, the USC subset was extended with unexpected LN-positive patients from the University of Berne (UB) (combined subgroup 521 patients). Patients were grouped and compared according to decade of surgery (1980-1989/1990-1999/≥2000). Survival probabilities were calculated with Kaplan-Meier plots, log-rank tests compared outcomes according to decade of surgery, followed by multivariable verification.
The 10-year recurrence-free survival was 78-80% in patients with organ-confined, LN-negative disease, 53-60% in patients with extravesical, yet LN-negative disease and ≈30% in LN-positive patients. Although the number of patients receiving systemic chemotherapy increased, no survival improvement was noted in either the entire USC cohort, or in the combined LN-positive USC-UB cohort. In contrast, patient age at surgery increased progressively, suggesting a relative survival benefit.
Radical surgery remains the mainstay of therapy for muscle-invasive bladder cancer. Yet, our study reveals predictable outcomes but no survival improvement in patients undergoing RC over the last three decades. Any future survival improvements are likely to result from more effective systemic treatments and/or earlier detection of the disease.
Keywords
Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cystectomy, Female, Humans, Lymph Node Excision/methods, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms/surgery, Young Adult
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
08/01/2021 16:30
Last modification date
09/01/2021 7:26
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