| Literature DB >> 25140295 |
Guy-Anne Turgeon1, Luis Souhami1.
Abstract
Bladder cancer is considered as primarily a disease of the elderly, typically aged in their 70s or 80s and often with associated medical comorbidities. Unfortunately, fewer elderly patients receive radical treatment for muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) that their younger counterparts. Over the last decades, several studies have shown that the use of trimodality therapy consisting of transurethral bladder resection followed by concomitant chemotherapy and radiation therapy results in comparable outcomes to radical cystectomy, considered the gold standard for this disease. In this review, we revised the literature on bladder-preservation treatments using the trimodality approach in the elderly population with MIBC.Entities:
Keywords: bladder cancer; bladder preservation; chemotherapy; elderly; radiation therapy; trimodality therapy
Year: 2014 PMID: 25140295 PMCID: PMC4122205 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Patient demographics and treatment parameters.
| Authors [year] | Study (tx years) | Elderly definition | Median age (year) [range] | Clinical stage | Histology | Hydronephrosis | Complete TURBT | Induction treatment | Concurrent chemotherapy | Radiation dose (Gy) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arias et al. ( | Retrospective (1988–1994) | 20 | ≥70 years | 74 [70–78] | T2–4,N0–1,M0 | Urothelial | 40% | 35% | TURBT + MVAC | CDDP | 65 |
| Eapen et al. ( | Prospective data (cases) (1985–1996) | 35 | ≥75 years | – [75–88] | Ta-4,N0–1,M0 | – | 31% | 14% | TURBT (80% pts) | IA CDDP | 60 |
| Pfister et al. ( | Retrospective (–) | 45 | Elderly and frail | 75 [68–86] | T1–3,N0,M0 | – | – | – | TURBT | CDDP | 50 |
| Goffin et al. ( | Retrospective (1985–2000) | 14 | ≥70 years | 79 [74–87] | T2–3,N0,M0 | Urothelial Squamous | – | 43% | TURBT | CDDP ± 5-FU CDDP ± MCV(adj.) | Group 1: 52–60 Group 2: 24.0 + 20.0 (3 Gy bid) Group 3: 40.8 + 24.0 (1.6–1.8 bid) |
| Tran et al. ( | Retrospective (1992–2005) | 39 3 pts RT alone | ≥70 years | 78 [70–87] | T2–T4a,N0,M0 | Urothelial | 21% | 64% | TURBT | CDDP ± 5-FU CDDP ± MCV(adj.) 5-FU | Group 1: 52–64 Group 2: 24.0 + 20.0 (3 bid) Group 3: 40.8 + 24.0 (1.6–1.8 bid) |
| Rodica et al. ( | Retrospective (2005–2007) | 34 | Elderly | 79 [66–89] | T2–T4, Nx, M0 | Urothelial | – | – | – | GEM | mean: 56.4 |
| Khoury et al. ( | Retrospective (1996–2007) | 68 | Elderly and frail | 78 [70–91] | T1–T4a,Nx,M0 | Urothelial (85%) | – | Dx TURBT only | None | CDDP CBDCA | median: 63 |
| Hsieh et al. ( | Retrospective (2006–2009) | 19 10 pts RT alone | ≥65 years | 79 [65–90] | T1–T4,N0–2,M0 | Urothelial | – | – | TURBT | CDDP ± 5-FU CBDCA ± GEM | median: 57.6 IMRT or HT |
| Beltran et al. ( | Retrospective (2010–2011) | 16 4 pts RT alone | ≥78 years | 83 [78–88] | T2–T4,N0–1,M0 | Urothelial | 25% | – | TURBT ± CBDCA + GEM | CBDCA CDDP | median: 65 |
| Azuma et al. ( | Prospective (1997–2013) | 134 OMC = 89 RC = 45 | ≥70 years | OMC = 77 [70–91] | Tis-3,N0,M0 | Urothelial | – | – | TURBT | IA CDDP + HD | 60.4 |
| Clayman et al. ( | Prospective data (cases) (1986–2008) | 93 | ≥75 years | – | T2–T4a,N0,M0 | Urothelial | – (mostly none) | – (approx 2/3) | TURBT ± MCV | CDDP ± 5-FU CDDP + taxol | 40 + 24–25 (qd or bid) |
| Turgeon et al. ( | Retrospective (2008–2012) | 24 | ≥70 years | 79 [72–88] | T2–3,N0,M0 | Urothelial | 17% | 79% | TURBT | GEM ± Everolimus CDDP | 50 (2.5Gy qd) IMRT |
5-FU, 5-fluorouracil; adj., adjuvant; bid, twice daily; CBDCA, carboplatin; CDDP, cisplatin; GEM, gemcitabine; Gy, gray; HD, hemodialysis; HT, helical tomotherapy; IA, intra-arterial; IMRT, intensity-modulated radiation therapy; MCV: methotrexate, cisplatin and vinblastine; MTX, methotrexate; MVAC, methotrexate, vinblastine, doxorubicin, cisplatin; .
Median follow-up, outcomes, and toxicities.
| Authors [year] | Median follow-up (months) | Complete response % | Cancer-specific survival % (years) | Overall survival % (years) | Acute grade 3–4 toxicities | Late grade 3–4 toxicities |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arias et al. ( | 60 [30–93] | 55 | 79 (2) | 75 (2) | 10% (GU) | 5% (Cystectomy 2nd to hemorrhagic cystitis) |
| 54 (3) | 34 (3) | |||||
| 43 (5) | 27 (5) | |||||
| Eapen et al. ( | 16 [3–123] | 93 | 82 (2) | 72 (2) | ≈29% (pneumonia, stroke, GI, neuropathy) | 23% (death, stroke, enteritis, sacralgia) |
| 63 (3) | 43 (3) | |||||
| 63 (5) | 34 (5) | |||||
| Pfister et al. ( | – | 51 | – | 50 (2) | – | – |
| Goffin et al. ( | 17 | – | – | 45 (2) | 43% (GI, GU, HEM, Heart failure) | 0% |
| Tran et al. ( | 15 [2–126] | 77 | 60 (2) | 44 (2) | 28% (GI, GU, HEM) | 8% (GU) |
| 48 (3) | 39 (3) | |||||
| 37 (5) | 30 (5) | |||||
| Rodica et al. ( | 17 | 38 | – | 82 (1) | 24% (GI, HEM) | – |
| Khoury et al. ( | 55 | – | – | 50 (2) | 19% (GU, HEM, Renal) | 7% (GU, GI, Recto-vesical fistula) |
| 31 (5) | ||||||
| Hsieh et al. ( | – | – | – | 33 (2) | 16% (HEM) | – |
| Beltran et al. ( | 14 | – | – | 73 (1) | 0% | – |
| Azuma et al. ( | 38 [4–189] | 91 | – | 93 (2) | 0% | – |
| 88 (3) | ||||||
| 88 (5) | ||||||
| Clayman et al. ( | 59 (all MGH cohort) | 67 | 60 (5) | – | – | – |
| Turgeon et al. ( | 28 [7–60] | 83 | 80 (2) | 69 (2) | 17% (GI,GU, HEM, Liver) | 0% |
| 71 (3) | 61 (3) |
GI, gastroinstestinal; GU, genitourinary; HEM, hematologic; MGH, Massachusetts General Hospital; –, data not available.