| Literature DB >> 27725745 |
Jian Cao1,2, Xiaokun Zhao1, Zhaohui Zhong1, Lei Zhang1, Xuan Zhu1, Ran Xu1.
Abstract
The effect of pre-operative renal insufficiency on urothelial carcinoma (UC) prognosis has been investigated by numerous studies. While the majority report worse UC outcomes in patients with renal insufficiency, the results between the studies differed wildly. To enable us to better estimate the prognostic value of renal insufficiency on UC, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis based on the published literature. A total of 16 studies which involved 5,232 patients with UC, investigated the relationship between pre-operative renal insufficiency and disease prognosis. Estimates of combined hazard ratio (HR) for bladder urothelial carcinoma recurrence, cancer-specific survival (CSS) and overall survival (OS) were 1.65 (95% CI, 1.11-2.19), 1.59 (95% CI, 1.14-2.05) and 1.45 (95% CI, 1.19-1.71), respectively; and for upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma recurrence, CSS and OS were 2.27 (95% CI, 1.42-3.12), 1.02 (95% CI, 0.47-1.57) and 1.52 (95% CI, 1.05-1.99), respectively. Our results indicate that UC patients with pre-operative renal insufficiency tend to have higher recurrence rates and poorer survival compared to those with clinically normal renal function, thus renal function should be closely monitored in these patients. The impact of intervention for renal insufficiency on the prognosis of UC needs to be further studied.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27725745 PMCID: PMC5057078 DOI: 10.1038/srep35214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Flow diagram of literature search and selection for meta-analysis.
Characteristics of 16 eligible studies for meta-analysis.
| Study | Number | Area | Research Time | Location | Quality score (%) | End Points | RI Indicator | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Steffen (2014) | 162 | Germany | 1996–2006 | Ba | 80% | Re | eGFR (<60 vs. >60 ml/min) | |
| Hinata (2015) | 730 | Japan | 2001–2010 | Ba | 85% | OS | eGFR (<60 vs. >60 ml/min) | |
| Fossa (1996) | 534 | Norway | 1980–1991 | Ba | 65% | OS | SrC (≥120 vs. <120 μmol/l) | |
| Fokdal (2004) | 292 | Denmark | 1994–2002 | Ba | 80% | OS/Re | SrC (≥120 vs. <120 μmol/l) | |
| Hannisdal (1993) | 202 | Norway | 1980–1987 | Ba | 55% | OS | SrC (≥120 vs. <120 μmol/l) | |
| Thrasher (1993) | 507 | USA | 1969–1990 | Ba | 55% | CSS | SrC (≥1.5 vs. <1.5 mg/dl) | |
| Fossa (1993) | 305 | Norway | 1980–1990 | Ba | 50% | CSS | SrC (≥150 vs. <150 μmol/l) | |
| Yang (2002) | 310 | Taiwan | 1987–1997 | Ba | 85% | CSS | SrC (>3 vs. <1.5 mg/dl) | |
| Sengeløv (1994) | 210 | Demark | 1976–1991 | UUT | 65% | OS | SrC (normal vs. <abnormal) | |
| Chung (2007) | 150 | Taiwan | 1996–2006 | UUT | 75% | OS/Re/CSS | No CKD vs. Earlier CKD | |
| Huang (2006) | 439 | Taiwan | 1977–2003 | UUT | 80% | Re | SrC (≥2.0 vs. <2.0 mg/ml) | |
| Fang (2014) | 509 | China | 2000–2010 | UUT | 85% | Re | eGFR (<60 vs. >60 ml/min) | |
| Ito (2013) | 70 | Japan | 1999–2012 | UUT | 75% | Re | eGFR <60 vs. >60 ml/min) | |
| Li (2008) | 260 | Taiwan | 1990–2005 | UUT | 75% | Re | SrC (>1.4 vs. ≤1.4 mg/dl) | |
| Sakano (2013) | 453 | Japan | 1995–2009 | UUT | 75% | CSS | SrC (≥1.3 vs. <1.3 mg/dl) | |
| Morizane (2012) | 99 | Japan | 1995–2011 | UUT | 75% | CSS | SrC (≥1.0 vs. <1.0 mg/dl) |
1Ba-bladder; UUT-upper urinary tract.
2percentages of total possible score.
3OS-overall survival; CSS-cancer specific survival; Re-recurrence.
4RI-renal insufficiency; eGFR-estimated glomerular filtration rate; SrC-serum creatinine; CKD-chronic kidney disease.
The incidences of renal insufficiency in subgroups.
| Study | Location | Fit | Unfit | Total | RI% | RI Indicator | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fokdal (2004) | Ba | 237 | 55 | 292 | 18.84% | SrC (>120 μmol/l vs. ≤120 μmol/l) | |
| Fossa (1993) | Ba | 263 | 42 | 305 | 13.77% | SrC (>150 μmol/l vs. ≤150 μmol/l) | |
| Pollack (1995) | Ba | 194 | 29 | 223 | 13.00% | SrC (>1.5 mg/dl vs. ≤1.5 mg/dl) | |
| Steffen (2014) | Ba | 133 | 29 | 162 | 17.90% | eGFR (>60 ml/min vs. ≤60 ml/min) | |
| Spera (1988) | Ba | 100 | 16 | 116 | 13.79% | SrC (>1.5 mg/dl vs. ≤1.5 mg/dl) | |
| Thrasher (1993) | Ba | 433 | 74 | 507 | 14.59% | SrC (>1.5 mg/dl vs. ≤1.5 mg/dl) | |
| Yang (2002) | Ba | 231 | 79 | 310 | 25.48% | SrC (>1.5 mg/dl vs. ≤1.5 mg/dl) | |
| Chen (2007) | UUT | 40 | 64 | 104 | 61.54% | eGFR (>60 ml/min vs. ≤60 ml/min) | |
| Chung (2007) | UUT | 37 | 113 | 150 | 75.33% | No CKD vs. CDK stage 1–5 | |
| Fang (2015) | UUT | 388 | 504 | 892 | 56.50% | eGFR (>60 ml/min vs. ≤60 ml/min) | |
| Huang (2006) | UUT | 349 | 90 | 439 | 20.50% | SrC (>2.0 mg/dl vs. ≤2.0 mg/dl) | |
| Ito (2013) | UUT | 39 | 31 | 70 | 44.29% | eGFR (>60 ml/min vs. ≤60 ml/min) | |
| Li (2008) | UUT | 158 | 102 | 260 | 39.23% | SrC (>1.4 mg/dl vs. ≤1.4 mg/dl) | |
| Morizane (2012) | UUT | 33 | 66 | 99 | 66.67% | SrC (>1.0 mg/dl vs. ≤1.0 mg/dl) | |
| Sakano (2013) | UUT | 377 | 76 | 453 | 16.78% | SrC (>1.3 mg/dl vs. ≤1.3 mg/dl) | |
| Yafi (2014) | UUT | 504 | 525 | 1029 | 51.02% | eGFR (>60 ml/min vs. ≤60 ml/min) | |
| Sengeløv (2000) | Mix | 104 | 14 | 118 | 11.86% | SrC (Normal vs. High) | |
| Ichioka (2015) | Mix | 145 | 200 | 345 | 57.97% | eGFR (>60 ml/min vs. ≤60 ml/min) | |
SrC-serum creatinine; CKD-chronic kidney disease.
1Ba-bladder; UUT-upper urinary tract.
2RI-renal insufficiency; eGFR-estimated glomerular filtration rate.
Figure 2Meta-analysis of the association between renal insufficient and prognosis of Bladder Urothelial Carcinoma.
(A) Recurrence for Bladder Cancer; (B) Cancer-specific Survival for Bladder Cancer; (C) Overall Survival for Bladder Cancer. Each study was shown by the name of the first author (publish year/patients numbers) and the HRs with 95% CIs.
Figure 3Meta-analysis of the association between renal insufficient and Prognosis of Upper Urinary Tract Urothelial Carcinoma.
(A) Recurrence for Upper Urinary Tract Urothelial Carcinoma; (B) Cancer-specific Survival for Upper Urinary Tract Urothelial Carcinoma; (C) Overall Survival for Upper Urinary Tract Urothelial Carcinoma. Each study was shown by the name of the first author (publish year/patients numbers) and the HRs with 95% CIs.