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Surgical approach in patients with T4 bladder cancer as primary treatment: Disaster or option with improved quality of life

OBJECTIVES: Whereas local control is often insufficient in conservative management of T4 bladder cancer, neoadjuvant chemotherapy delays definite treatment, which could result in increased therapy-associated morbidity and mortality during the course of the disease. Primary cystectomy has been report...

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Autores principales: Nagele, Udo, Anastasiadis, Aristotelis G., Merseburger, Axel S., Hennenlotter, Jörg, Horstmann, Markus, Sievert, Karl-Dietrich, Stenzl, Arnulf, Kuczyk, Markus A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2684222/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19468367
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0970-1591.38610
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author Nagele, Udo
Anastasiadis, Aristotelis G.
Merseburger, Axel S.
Hennenlotter, Jörg
Horstmann, Markus
Sievert, Karl-Dietrich
Stenzl, Arnulf
Kuczyk, Markus A.
author_facet Nagele, Udo
Anastasiadis, Aristotelis G.
Merseburger, Axel S.
Hennenlotter, Jörg
Horstmann, Markus
Sievert, Karl-Dietrich
Stenzl, Arnulf
Kuczyk, Markus A.
author_sort Nagele, Udo
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Whereas local control is often insufficient in conservative management of T4 bladder cancer, neoadjuvant chemotherapy delays definite treatment, which could result in increased therapy-associated morbidity and mortality during the course of the disease. Primary cystectomy has been reported to be associated with a high complication rate and unsatisfactory clinical efficacy. Herein, we report postoperative outcome in 21 T4 bladder cancer patients subjected to primary cystectomy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-one patients underwent radical cystectomy for T4 (T4a/b: 14 and seven cases, respectively) bladder cancer. At the time of surgery, eight patients had regional lymph node metastases (N2: 6; N3: 2). The average age was 64 (52-77) years (≥70 years: n = 7). The postoperative follow-up was 13 (1-36) months for the whole group. RESULTS: Mean duration of postoperative hospitalization was 19 (11-50) days. Whereas 10 patients received no intra - or postoperative blood transfusions, an average number of 3 (1-7) blood units were administered in the remaining cases. The mean postoperative hemoglobin value of patients not receiving any blood transfusions was 10 (8.5 - 11.4) g/dl. Major therapy-associated complications were paresthesia affecting the lower extremities (n = 3) as well as insignificant pulmonary embolism, enterocutaneous fistulation and acute renal failure in one patient, respectively. At the time of data evaluation, 11 patients were still alive after a follow-up of 20 (6-36) months. Four patients ≥70 years at the time of cystectomy were still alive 11, 11, 22 and 31 months following surgery, respectively. CONCLUSION: Primary cystectomy for T4 bladder cancer is a technically feasible approach that is associated with a tolerable therapy-related morbidity/mortality. Additionally, a satisfactory clinical outcome is observed even in a substantial number of elderly patients.
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spelling pubmed-26842222009-05-22 Surgical approach in patients with T4 bladder cancer as primary treatment: Disaster or option with improved quality of life Nagele, Udo Anastasiadis, Aristotelis G. Merseburger, Axel S. Hennenlotter, Jörg Horstmann, Markus Sievert, Karl-Dietrich Stenzl, Arnulf Kuczyk, Markus A. Indian J Urol Symposium OBJECTIVES: Whereas local control is often insufficient in conservative management of T4 bladder cancer, neoadjuvant chemotherapy delays definite treatment, which could result in increased therapy-associated morbidity and mortality during the course of the disease. Primary cystectomy has been reported to be associated with a high complication rate and unsatisfactory clinical efficacy. Herein, we report postoperative outcome in 21 T4 bladder cancer patients subjected to primary cystectomy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-one patients underwent radical cystectomy for T4 (T4a/b: 14 and seven cases, respectively) bladder cancer. At the time of surgery, eight patients had regional lymph node metastases (N2: 6; N3: 2). The average age was 64 (52-77) years (≥70 years: n = 7). The postoperative follow-up was 13 (1-36) months for the whole group. RESULTS: Mean duration of postoperative hospitalization was 19 (11-50) days. Whereas 10 patients received no intra - or postoperative blood transfusions, an average number of 3 (1-7) blood units were administered in the remaining cases. The mean postoperative hemoglobin value of patients not receiving any blood transfusions was 10 (8.5 - 11.4) g/dl. Major therapy-associated complications were paresthesia affecting the lower extremities (n = 3) as well as insignificant pulmonary embolism, enterocutaneous fistulation and acute renal failure in one patient, respectively. At the time of data evaluation, 11 patients were still alive after a follow-up of 20 (6-36) months. Four patients ≥70 years at the time of cystectomy were still alive 11, 11, 22 and 31 months following surgery, respectively. CONCLUSION: Primary cystectomy for T4 bladder cancer is a technically feasible approach that is associated with a tolerable therapy-related morbidity/mortality. Additionally, a satisfactory clinical outcome is observed even in a substantial number of elderly patients. Medknow Publications 2008 /pmc/articles/PMC2684222/ /pubmed/19468367 http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0970-1591.38610 Text en © Indian Journal of Urology http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Symposium
Nagele, Udo
Anastasiadis, Aristotelis G.
Merseburger, Axel S.
Hennenlotter, Jörg
Horstmann, Markus
Sievert, Karl-Dietrich
Stenzl, Arnulf
Kuczyk, Markus A.
Surgical approach in patients with T4 bladder cancer as primary treatment: Disaster or option with improved quality of life
title Surgical approach in patients with T4 bladder cancer as primary treatment: Disaster or option with improved quality of life
title_full Surgical approach in patients with T4 bladder cancer as primary treatment: Disaster or option with improved quality of life
title_fullStr Surgical approach in patients with T4 bladder cancer as primary treatment: Disaster or option with improved quality of life
title_full_unstemmed Surgical approach in patients with T4 bladder cancer as primary treatment: Disaster or option with improved quality of life
title_short Surgical approach in patients with T4 bladder cancer as primary treatment: Disaster or option with improved quality of life
title_sort surgical approach in patients with t4 bladder cancer as primary treatment: disaster or option with improved quality of life
topic Symposium
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2684222/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19468367
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0970-1591.38610
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