| Literature DB >> 26791567 |
Carlo Patriarca1, Rodolfo Hurle2, Marco Moschini3, Massimo Freschi4, Piergiuseppe Colombo5, Maurizio Colecchia6, Lucia Ferrari7, Giorgio Guazzoni8, Andrea Conti9, Giario Conti10, Roberta Lucianò11, Tiziana Magnani12, Renzo Colombo13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: When treating bladder cancer patients, the most significant problems usually concern cases with high-grade non-muscle-invasive carcinoma, and a better understanding of which patients would benefit from early radical cystectomy is urgently needed. The uropathology community is seeking more user-friendly approaches to distinguishing between T1 cancers exhibiting different types of clinical behavior.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26791567 PMCID: PMC4721190 DOI: 10.1186/s13000-016-0466-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Descriptive characteristics of 314 patients treated with transurethral resection for T1HG Bladder carcinoma between 2011 and 2007
| Variables | Overall population ( |
|---|---|
| Number recurrence | 115 (36.6 %) |
| Number progression | 33 (10.5 %) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 275 (87.6 %) |
| Female | 39 (12.4 %) |
| Age | |
| Mean | 71.3 |
| Median (IQR) | 72 (64–79) |
| Recurrence (EAU classification) | |
| First episode | 218 (69.4 %) |
| Recurrent episode | 90 (28.7 %) |
| More than 1 episode | 6 (1.9 %) |
| Focality | |
| 1 | 140 (44.6 %) |
| 2 | 24 (7.6 %) |
| 3 | 66 (21.0 %) |
| No data | 84 (26.8 %) |
| Pure transitional | 281 (89.5 %) |
| Areas of divergent differentiation | 33 (10.5 %) |
| CIS | 54 (17.2 %) |
| LVI | 33 (10.5 %) |
| SUB-STAGING | |
| MM level feasibility | 230 (73.2 %) |
| van Rhijn system feasibility | 314 (100 %) |
| ROL system feasibility | 314 (100 %) |
|
| |
| Above (T1a) | 177 (56.4 %) |
| Below (T1b) | 51 (16.2 %) |
| van Rhijn | |
| T1m | 109 (34.7 %) |
| T1e | 205 (65.3 %) |
| ROL | |
| 1 | 152 (48.4 %) |
| 2 | 162 (51.6 %) |
| ROL FOCI | |
| 2/3 | 31 (9.9 %) |
| > 3 | 99 (31.5 %) |
IQR interquartile range, CIS carcinoma in situ, LVI lymphovascular invasion, MM muscolaris mucosa, ROL rete oncologica lombardia
Fig. 1Lamina propria invasion in a high-grade papillary urothelial carcinoma: T1m/ROL1 substaging (T1 < 0.5 mm)
Fig. 2Lamina propria invasion in a high-grade papillary urothelial carcinoma: T1e/ROL1 substaging (the focus is contained within one x 200 field, although it is larger than one x400 field)
Fig. 3Multiple foci of lamina propria invasion in a high-grade papillary urothelial carcinoma: T1e/ROL2 substaging (multifocality of invasion cumulatively amounting to more than 1 mm, i.e. > 200x field)
Fig. 4Recurrence-free survival was significantly better (p < 0.001) in the group that underwent reTUR
Fig. 5No significant correlations between the three substaging systems and the recurrence-free rate on Kaplan Meier estimates
Fig. 6Progression-free rate: ROL substaging shows a significant correlation with progression in the Kaplan Meier estimates
Fig. 7None of the three methods were able to predict progression in the group of 64 cases not treated with reTUR
Fig. 8Progression-free rate: ROL substaging shows a significant correlation with progression in the Kaplan Meier estimates for the 250 cases treated with reTUR
Univariate Cox regression analyses assessing recurrence and progression after transuretral resection due to T1HG bladder cancer
| Variables | Univariate Recurrence | Univariate Progression | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR (IQR) |
| HR (IQR) |
| |
| Age, years | 0.99 (0.98–1.01) | 0.5 | 1.00 (0.97–1.04) | 0.8 |
| ROL 2 | 0.81 (0.56–1.18) | 0.2 | 2.09 (1.01–4.32) | 0.04 |
| T1e | 0.77 (0.53–1.11) | 0.1 | 1.68 (0.78–3.63) | 0.2 |
| T1b | 1.25 (0.78–2.01) | 0.4 | 2.06 (0.91–4.67) | 0.08 |
| CIS | 0.77 (0.66–1.75) | 0.7 | 1.44 (0.62–3.37) | 0.4 |
| LVI | 1.11 (0.62–1.98) | 0.7 | 2.55 (1.10–5.89) | 0.03 |
| Pure Transtitional vs. non pure transitional | 0.40 (0.16.0.97) | 0.04 | 0.31 (0.04–2.29) | 0.2 |