Peter U Ardelt1, Malte Rieken2, Jan Ebbing2, Gernot Bonkat2, Tatjana Vlajnic3, Lukas Bubendorf3, Rainer Grobholz4, Jürg Steiger5, Alexander Bachmann2, Felix Burkhalter5. 1. Department of Urology, University Hospital Basel, Switzerland. Electronic address: peter.ardelt@usb.ch. 2. Department of Urology, University Hospital Basel, Switzerland. 3. Institute of Pathology, University Hospital Basel, Switzerland. 4. Institute of Pathology, Cantonal Hospital Aarau, Aarau, Switzerland. 5. Department of Transplant Immunology & Nephrology, University Hospital Basel, Switzerland.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the incidence and risk factors for urothelial cancer (UC) as well as the oncological outcome and allograft function in renal transplant recipients. SUBJECTS/PATIENTS: We conducted a retrospective analysis of 1855 consecutive patients undergoing renal transplantation (TX) between February 1982 and May 2014 at a single center. UC incidence, overall and cancer-specific survival, recurrence and progression rates, risk factors for UC, and renal function were determined. Fisher's exact test and log-rank Mantel-Cox test were used as appropriate. RESULTS: In renal transplant recipients, incidence of de novo UC was 1.35% (25/1855). Deceased donor transplantation (P = .002), increased age at transplantation (P = .011), and analgesic abuse (P = .005) were significant risk factors for the development of UC post-TX. Progression rate and recurrence rate were doubled for post-TX-UC but stable for patients with pre-TX-UC compared with the general population. Analgesic abuse was associated with worse cancer specific and overall survival in post-TX patients. The overall survival status was significantly lower for post-TX patients at a median of 34 months vs 222 months in control patients. Adjuvant treatment was scarcely used. UC had no significant influence on graft function. CONCLUSION: A higher incidence of UC was identified in renal transplant recipients compared with that for the general population. These observations justify screening for UC in renal transplant patients, especially considering that in a large proportion, a tentative diagnosis was possible with noninvasive urine analysis. Prudent adjuvant treatment for UC should be used. Limitations of this study were the retrospective design and the single-center experience.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the incidence and risk factors for urothelial cancer (UC) as well as the oncological outcome and allograft function in renal transplant recipients. SUBJECTS/PATIENTS: We conducted a retrospective analysis of 1855 consecutive patients undergoing renal transplantation (TX) between February 1982 and May 2014 at a single center. UC incidence, overall and cancer-specific survival, recurrence and progression rates, risk factors for UC, and renal function were determined. Fisher's exact test and log-rank Mantel-Cox test were used as appropriate. RESULTS: In renal transplant recipients, incidence of de novo UC was 1.35% (25/1855). Deceased donor transplantation (P = .002), increased age at transplantation (P = .011), and analgesic abuse (P = .005) were significant risk factors for the development of UC post-TX. Progression rate and recurrence rate were doubled for post-TX-UC but stable for patients with pre-TX-UC compared with the general population. Analgesic abuse was associated with worse cancer specific and overall survival in post-TX patients. The overall survival status was significantly lower for post-TX patients at a median of 34 months vs 222 months in control patients. Adjuvant treatment was scarcely used. UC had no significant influence on graft function. CONCLUSION: A higher incidence of UC was identified in renal transplant recipients compared with that for the general population. These observations justify screening for UC in renal transplant patients, especially considering that in a large proportion, a tentative diagnosis was possible with noninvasive urine analysis. Prudent adjuvant treatment for UC should be used. Limitations of this study were the retrospective design and the single-center experience.