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Oncological outcomes of visibly complete transurethral resection prior to neoadjuvant chemotherapy for bladder cancer
Baird, Bryce; Bilgili, Ahmet; Anderson, Augustus; Carames, Gianpiero; Pathak, Ram A.; Ball, Colleen T.; Pak, Raymond; Zganjar, Andrew; Young, Paul R.; Lyon, Timothy D..
  • Baird, Bryce; Mayo Clinic. Department of Urology. Jacksonville. US
  • Bilgili, Ahmet; Mayo Clinic. Department of Urology. Jacksonville. US
  • Anderson, Augustus; Tulane University. School of Medicine. New Orleans. US
  • Carames, Gianpiero; University of Alabama. Department of Pathology. Birmingham. US
  • Pathak, Ram A.; Mayo Clinic. Department of Urology. Jacksonville. US
  • Ball, Colleen T.; Mayo Clinic. Department of Quantitative Health Sciences. Jacksonville. US
  • Pak, Raymond; Mayo Clinic. Department of Urology. Jacksonville. US
  • Zganjar, Andrew; Mayo Clinic. Department of Urology. Jacksonville. US
  • Young, Paul R.; Mayo Clinic. Department of Urology. Jacksonville. US
  • Lyon, Timothy D.; Mayo Clinic. Department of Urology. Jacksonville. US
Int. braz. j. urol ; 49(4): 479-489, July-Aug. 2023. tab, graf
Article Dans Anglais | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1506404
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACT

Purpose:

To evaluate the potential oncologic benefit of a visibly complete transurethral resection of a bladder tumor (TURBT) prior to neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) and radical cystectomy (RC). Materials and

Methods:

We identified patients who received NAC and RC between 2011-2021. Records were reviewed to assess TURBT completeness. The primary outcome was pathologic downstaging (<ypT2N0), with complete pathologic response (ypT0N0) and survival as secondary endpoints. Logistic regression and Cox proportional hazards models were utilized.

Results:

We identified 153 patients, including 116 (76%) with a complete TURBT. Sixty-four (42%) achieved <ypT2N0 and 43 (28%) achieved ypT0N0. When comparing those with and without a complete TURBT, there was no significant difference in the proportion with <ypT2N0 (43% vs 38%, P=0.57) or ypT0N0 (28% vs 27%, P=0.87). After median follow-up of 3.6 years (IQR 1.5-5.1), 86 patients died, 37 died from bladder cancer, and 61 had recurrence. We did not observe a statistically significant association of complete TURBT with cancer-specific or recurrence-free survival (p≥0.20), although the hazard of death from any cause was significantly higher among those with incomplete TURBT even after adjusting for ECOG and pathologic T stage, HR 1.77 (95% CI 1.04-3.00, P=.034).

Conclusions:

A visibly complete TURBT was not associated with pathologic downstaging, cancer-specific or recurrence-free survival following NAC and RC. These data do not support the need for repeat TURBT to achieve a visibly complete resection if NAC and RC are planned.


Texte intégral: Disponible Indice: LILAS (Amériques) langue: Anglais Texte intégral: Int. braz. j. urol Thème du journal: Urologie Année: 2023 Type: Article Pays d'affiliation: États-Unis d'Amérique Institution/Pays d'affiliation: Mayo Clinic/US / Tulane University/US / University of Alabama/US

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Texte intégral: Disponible Indice: LILAS (Amériques) langue: Anglais Texte intégral: Int. braz. j. urol Thème du journal: Urologie Année: 2023 Type: Article Pays d'affiliation: États-Unis d'Amérique Institution/Pays d'affiliation: Mayo Clinic/US / Tulane University/US / University of Alabama/US