Literature DB >> 29524972

Sociodemographic and survival disparities for histologic variants of bladder cancer.

Joshua S Jue1, Tulay Koru-Sengul, Kevin J Moore, Feng Miao, Mahmoud Alameddine, Bruno Nahar, Sanoj Punnen, Dipen J Parekh, Chad R Ritch, Mark L Gonzalgo.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: To investigate the impact of perioperative factors on overall survival among patients with histologic variants of bladder cancer treated with radical cystectomy.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The National Cancer Data Base was utilized to identify patients diagnosed with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (cT2-4, N0, M0) from 2004-2013. Variant histology bladder cancers (non-mucinous adenocarcinoma, mucinous/signet ring adenocarcinoma, micropapillary urothelial carcinoma, small cell carcinoma, and squamous cell carcinoma) were compared to urothelial carcinoma with respect to overall survival. Adjusted hazard ratios (aHR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) were calculated from a multivariable Cox regression model to examine factors affecting overall survival, T upstaging, N upstaging, and positive surgical margins. Median survival was calculated using Kaplan-Meier analysis.
RESULTS: A total of 5,856 patients were included in this study. Significant predictors of worse overall survival included: African-American ancestry (aHR = 1.24, 95%CI: 1.03-1.48, p = 0.021), age (1.03, 1.02-1.03, p < 0.001), comorbidity (1.30, 1.20-1.40, p < 0.001), cT3 stage (1.41, 1.26-1.57, p < 0.001), and cT4 stage (1.59, 1.38-1.84, p < 0.001). Small cell carcinoma (2.10, 1.44-3.06, p < 0.001) and non-mucinous adenocarcinoma (1.59, 1.15-2.20, p = 0.005) were significant predictors of worse overall survival compared to urothelial carcinoma. Small cell carcinoma had the worst 5 year overall survival (15.5%, 95% CI: 5.2%-30.9%) compared to urothelial carcinoma (48.7%, 95% CI: 47.2%-50.2%). Micropapillary urothelial carcinoma was a significant predictor of increased progression to node positivity and positive margin status after radical cystectomy compared to urothelial carcinoma (6.01, 3.11-11.63, p < 0.001; 4.38, 2.05-9.38; p < 0.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Among bladder cancer patients with equal treatment and staging, small cell carcinoma and non-mucinous adenocarcinoma variant histologies were predictive of worse overall survival compared to urothelial carcinoma. Patient demographics such as African-American ancestry and age were also predictive of worse overall survival among variant histology bladder cancer and urothelial carcinoma.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29524972

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Urol        ISSN: 1195-9479            Impact factor:   1.344


  4 in total

1.  Plasmacytoid variant urothelial carcinoma of the bladder: effect of radical cystectomy and chemotherapy in non-metastatic and metastatic patients.

Authors:  Gabriele Sorce; Rocco Simone Flammia; Benedikt Hoeh; Francesco Chierigo; Benedikt Horlemann; Christoph Würnschimmel; Zhe Tian; Markus Graefen; Carlo Terrone; Michele Gallucci; Felix K H Chun; Fred Saad; Shahrokh F Shariat; Francesco Montorsi; Alberto Briganti; Pierre I Karakiewicz
Journal:  World J Urol       Date:  2022-01-27       Impact factor: 3.661

2.  Effect of bladder cancer variant histology on survival outcome in patients treated with radical cystectomy: A single-centre experience.

Authors:  Selim Komina; Gordana Petrusevska; Vesna Janevska; Rubens Jovanovic; Pance Zdravkovski; Skender Saidi; Beti Ivanovska Zafirovska; Sonja Topuzovska
Journal:  Urol Ann       Date:  2021-07-14

3.  Treating bladder adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Georgios Tsironis; Aristotle Bamias
Journal:  Transl Androl Urol       Date:  2018-12

4.  Nomograms to predict individual prognosis of patients with primary signet ring cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder.

Authors:  Tianming Ma; Xiaonan Wang; Zijian Tian; Lingfeng Meng; Wei Zhang; Jiawen Wang; Xiaodong Liu; Yaoguang Zhang
Journal:  Transl Cancer Res       Date:  2021-09       Impact factor: 1.241

  4 in total

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