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Natural history of surgically treated bladder carcinoma with extravesical tumor extension
Author(s) -
Quek Marcus L.,
Stein John P.,
Clark Peter E.,
Daneshmand Siamak,
Miranda Gus,
Cai Jie,
Groshen Susan,
Lieskovsky Gary,
Quinn David I.,
Raghavan Derek,
Skinner Donald G.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.052
H-Index - 304
eISSN - 1097-0142
pISSN - 0008-543X
DOI - 10.1002/cncr.11569
Subject(s) - medicine , cystectomy , lymph node , urology , lymph , adjuvant therapy , surgery , stage (stratigraphy) , bladder cancer , pathology , cancer , chemotherapy , paleontology , biology
BACKGROUND The current TNM classification for bladder carcinoma stratifies extravesical extension into microscopic (pT3a) and macroscopic (pT3b) tumor involvement. The authors evaluated the outcomes of patients with pT3a and pT3b disease after radical cystectomy. METHODS Patients ( n = 129) with transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder treated with radical cystectomy alone demonstrated pathologic extravesical tumor extension: 37 (29%) had pT3a disease and 92 (71%) had pT3b disease. No patient received any adjuvant therapy. With a median follow‐up of 13.6 years, the presence of lymph node involvement, margin positivity, local (pelvic) and distant disease recurrence, and clinical outcomes were determined. RESULTS Of the 129 patients, 43 (33%) had lymph node tumor involvement: 13 of 37 patients with pT3a disease (35%) and 30 of 92 patients with pT3b disease (33%). The 10‐year recurrence‐free and overall survival for the entire group was 54% and 20%, respectively. No statistical difference between pT3a and pT3b disease was observed with regard to recurrence‐free ( P = 0.54) and overall ( P = 0.66) survival. Lymph node involvement was predictive of a significantly worse 10‐year recurrence‐free survival (32%) compared with lymph node‐negative disease (60%; P = 0.003). Local disease recurrence was reported to occur in 12 patients (9%), whereas 37 patients (29%) were reported to develop distant metastases. Among those who had disease recurrence, the type of disease recurrence (local or distant) was not found to be associated with tumor stage (pT3a vs, pT3b, P = 0.47). CONCLUSIONS This cohort of surgically managed patients provided insight into the long‐term natural history of pathologically confirmed extravesical bladder carcinoma after radical cystectomy. There was no important difference in the incidence of lymph node involvement, survival rates, and disease recurrence rates between patients with microscopic and macroscopic extravesical extension. Adjuvant protocols should be undertaken for these high‐risk patients to further improve on these clinical outcomes. Cancer 2003;98:955–61. © 2003 American Cancer Society. DOI 10.1002/cncr.11569