| Literature DB >> 27014622 |
Ofer N Gofrit1, Vladimir Yutkin1, Amos Shapiro1, Galina Pizov2, Kevin C Zorn3, Guy Hidas1, Ilan Gielchinsky1, Mordechai Duvdevani4, Ezekiel H Landau1, Dov Pode1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High-grade urothelial carcinomas (UCs) often show foci of variant differentiation. There is limited information in the literature about the response of these variant urothelial tumors to immunotherapy with bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG). We compared the response, to treatment with BCG, of UC containing glandular, squamous, nested, and micropapillary types of differentiation to response of conventional non-muscle invasive high-grade UC.Entities:
Keywords: high-grade; immunotherapy; prognosis; urothelial carcinoma; variants
Year: 2016 PMID: 27014622 PMCID: PMC4791377 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2016.00043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Features of the patients with various tumor variants.
| Variant | Number of patients | Mean age (SD) | % Males | Stages a/1 (%) | CIS (%) | Median follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Micropapillary | 14 | 75.9 ± 8.8 | 93 | 4/10 (40) | 7 (50) | 32 |
| Squamous | 13 | 68.1 ± 12.6 | 92 | 0/13 (0) | 6 (46) | 53 |
| Nested | 7 | 68 ± 12.7 | 71 | 2/5 (40) | 2 (29) | 110 |
| Glandular | 9 | 75.2 ± 5.6 | 89 | 4/5 (80) | 3 (33) | 46 |
| Total | 41 | 71.9 ± 10.8 | 88 | 10/31 (24) | 19 (46) | 43 |
.
Two- and five-year survival rates according to type of variant tumor.
| Variant | Overall survival | Disease-specific survival | Progression-free survival | Recurrence-free survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Micropapillary | 75%/0% | 69.8%/69.8% | 69.8%/69.8% | 61.1%/50.9% |
| Squamous | 92.3%/79.1% | 65.3%/43.5% | 65.2%/43.5% | 66.1%/44.1% |
| Nested | 100%/0.80% | 100%/75% | 83.3%/50% | 71.4%/23.8% |
| Glandular | 100%/83.3% | 100%/100% | 100%/100% | 100%/66.7% |
| Total | 92.5%/66% | 85.6%/73.4% | 85.6%/60% | 72.3%/63.5% |
.
Figure 1Kaplan–Meier curves of the various variant types. (A) Recurrence-free survival, (B) progression (≥T2)-free survival, (C) disease-specific survival, and (D) overall survival.
Comparisons of the features of patients with conventional and variant tumors.
| Number of patients | Mean age (SD) | % Males | Stages a/1 (%) | CIS (%) | Median follow-up (months) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variant | 41 | 71.9 ± 10.8 | 88 | 10/31 (24) | 19 (46) | 43 |
| Conventional | 140 | 69.9 ± 10.4 | 86 | 39/101 (27.8) | 72 (51) | 54 |
| – | 0.24 | 1 | 0.84 | 0.6 | 0.39 |
Comparison of the prognosis of patients with conventional and variant tumors.
| Variant | Overall survival | Disease-specific survival | Progression-free survival | Recurrence-free survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variant | 92.5%/66% | 85.6%/73.4% | 85.6%/60% | 72.3%/63.5% |
| Conventional | 94.6%/89.5% | 97%/92.5% | 91.2%/82.5% | 79.2%/71.5% |
| 0.05 | 0.0004 | 0.002 | 0.05 |
Figure 2Kaplan–Meier curves comparing variant tumors to conventional high-grade tumors treated with immunotherapy. (A) Recurrence-free survival (p = 0.05), (B) progression (to stage >T2)-free survival (p = 0.002), (C) disease-specific survival (p = 0.0004), and (D) overall survival (p = 0.05).