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Is TURBT able to cure high risk recurrent superficial or muscle invasive bladder cancer: Factors resulting in pT0 radical cystectomy specimens

Abstract

Purpose

In 76% of radical cystectomy patients there is discrepancy between the initial stage at transurethral resection and the final pathological stage of the cystectomy specimen. More specifically in contemporary series the absence of tumor at radical cystectomy specimens (stage pT0) is estimated at 5-25%. Our aim was to determine which factors contributed to the absence of tumor in our series of radical cystectomy patients.

Materials and Methods

Fifty one patients were submitted to radical cystectomy in our department over the last 10 years (January 2002-January 2012). A thorough analysis of the patients' files with no residual tumor on the cystectomy specimen (pT0) was performed. Possible factors contributing to such a result were described and a systematic analysis of the relevant literature was performed.

Results

Five patients had a pT0 stage after radical cystectomy. Four of them had transitional cell carcinoma and one of them had squamous cell carcinoma of the bladder on the initial transurethral resection. None of the tumors presented lymphovascular invasion. Four patients are still alive and one died 45 months postoperatively from a cardiac cause.

Conclusions

Four factors were identified in our study to contribute towards a pT0 cystectomy result. Those included the absence of lymphovascular invasion, the completeness of transurethral resection, the experience of the surgeon and the use of a standardized technique for the transurethral resection. The time to cystectomy in our series did not have a negative effect on pT0 final pathology result.

Transurethral Resection of Prostate; Cystectomy; Urinary Bladder Neoplasms


INTRODUCTION

Radical cystectomy (RC) with pelvic lymph node dissection is the gold standard for treatment of muscle invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) as well as high risk superficial bladder cancer. In about 76% of patients there is discrepancy between the initial clinical T-stage (cT-stage) at transurethral resection of the bladder tumur (TURBT) and the final pathology (pT-stage) after RC (11. Hollenbeck BK, Miller DC, Dunn RL, Montie JE, Wei JT: The effects of stage divergence on survival after radical cystectomy for urothelial cancer. Urol Oncol. 2005; 23: 77-81.). Factors that may be responsible for such discrepancy may be poor sensitivity of current image exams, incomplete TURBT with undersampling of muscle tissue or a long interval between TURBT and RC (22. Herr HW: The value of a second transurethral resection in evaluating patients with bladder tumors. J Urol. 1999; 162: 74-6.,33. Chang SS, Hassan JM, Cookson MS, Wells N, Smith JA Jr.: Delaying radical cystectomy for muscle invasive bladder cancer results in worse pathological stage. J Urol. 2003; 170: 1085-7.). Clinical understaging of the tumor is reported in 40-49% of RC (11. Hollenbeck BK, Miller DC, Dunn RL, Montie JE, Wei JT: The effects of stage divergence on survival after radical cystectomy for urothelial cancer. Urol Oncol. 2005; 23: 77-81.,44. Pagano F, Bassi P, Galetti TP, Meneghini A, Milani C, Artibani W, et al.: Results of contemporary radical cystectomy for invasive bladder cancer: a clinicopathological study with an emphasis on the inadequacy of the tumor, nodes and metastases classification. J Urol. 1991; 145: 45-50.) while clinical overstaging occurs in 20-27% of RC (11. Hollenbeck BK, Miller DC, Dunn RL, Montie JE, Wei JT: The effects of stage divergence on survival after radical cystectomy for urothelial cancer. Urol Oncol. 2005; 23: 77-81.,55. Shariat SF, Palapattu GS, Karakiewicz PI, Rogers CG, Vazina A, Bastian PJ, et al.: Discrepancy between clinical and pathologic stage: impact on prognosis after radical cystectomy. Eur Urol. 2007; 51: 137-49; discussion 149-51.). Up to 30% of patients with MIBC at the time of TURBT have non-MIBC at RC specimen (55. Shariat SF, Palapattu GS, Karakiewicz PI, Rogers CG, Vazina A, Bastian PJ, et al.: Discrepancy between clinical and pathologic stage: impact on prognosis after radical cystectomy. Eur Urol. 2007; 51: 137-49; discussion 149-51.).

There are several reports on the effect on prognosis of tumor downstaging from MIBC at TURBT to non-MIBC at RC. Although one study reported no survival advantage (66. Thrasher JB, Frazier HA, Robertson JE, Paulson DF: Does of stage pT0 cystectomy specimen confer a survival advantage in patients with minimally invasive bladder cancer? J Urol. 1994; 152: 393-6.) most of them reported excellent long-term survival rates for patients with tumor downstaging (11. Hollenbeck BK, Miller DC, Dunn RL, Montie JE, Wei JT: The effects of stage divergence on survival after radical cystectomy for urothelial cancer. Urol Oncol. 2005; 23: 77-81.,55. Shariat SF, Palapattu GS, Karakiewicz PI, Rogers CG, Vazina A, Bastian PJ, et al.: Discrepancy between clinical and pathologic stage: impact on prognosis after radical cystectomy. Eur Urol. 2007; 51: 137-49; discussion 149-51.,77. Isbarn H, Karakiewicz PI, Shariat SF, Capitanio U, Palapattu GS, Sagalowsky AI, et al.: Residual pathological stage at radical cystectomy significantly impacts outcomes for initial T2N0 bladder cancer. J Urol. 2009; 182: 459-65; discussion 465.

8. Nielsen ME, Bastian PJ, Palapattu GS, Trock BJ, Schoenberg MP, Chan T, et al.: Recurrence-free survival after radical cystectomy of patients downstaged by transurethral resection. Urology. 2007; 70: 1091-5.

9. Volkmer BG, Kuefer R, Bartsch G Jr, Straub M, de Petriconi R, Gschwend JE, et al.: Effect of a pT0 cystectomy specimen without neoadjuvant therapy on survival. Cancer. 2005; 104: 2384-91.

10. Palapattu GS, Shariat SF, Karakiewicz PI, Bastian PJ, Rogers CG, Amiel G, et al.: Cancer specific outcomes in patients with pT0 disease following radical cystectomy. J Urol. 2006; 175: 1645-9; discussion 1649.
-1111. Loizaga Iriarte A, Senarriaga Ruiz de la Illa N, Lacasa Viscasillas I, Rábade Ferreiro A, Iriarte Soldevilla I, Unda Urzaiz M: Does a pT0 cystectomy specimen imply being tumour-free in the long term?. Actas Urol Esp. 2009; 33: 865-8.). The inclusion of patients who have been treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) and/or radiotherapy (55. Shariat SF, Palapattu GS, Karakiewicz PI, Rogers CG, Vazina A, Bastian PJ, et al.: Discrepancy between clinical and pathologic stage: impact on prognosis after radical cystectomy. Eur Urol. 2007; 51: 137-49; discussion 149-51.,66. Thrasher JB, Frazier HA, Robertson JE, Paulson DF: Does of stage pT0 cystectomy specimen confer a survival advantage in patients with minimally invasive bladder cancer? J Urol. 1994; 152: 393-6.,88. Nielsen ME, Bastian PJ, Palapattu GS, Trock BJ, Schoenberg MP, Chan T, et al.: Recurrence-free survival after radical cystectomy of patients downstaged by transurethral resection. Urology. 2007; 70: 1091-5.,1010. Palapattu GS, Shariat SF, Karakiewicz PI, Bastian PJ, Rogers CG, Amiel G, et al.: Cancer specific outcomes in patients with pT0 disease following radical cystectomy. J Urol. 2006; 175: 1645-9; discussion 1649.) complicates the interpretation of the results of these studies.

Our aim was to perform an analysis in our series (our center is a regional cancer center covering a population over 2 million) of radical cystectomies in order to determine which factors caused downstaging and particularly the absence of tumor at radical cystectomy. That obviously means that such tumors were in fact cured by just a TURBT from a surgical perspective.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

We retrospectively reviewed the final pathological result of all 51 radical cystectomies performed in our institution over the last 10 years (January 2002 until January 2012). Five pT0 radical cystectomies were discovered while patient and operative notes were thoroughly reviewed by two reviewers. Emphasis was placed when reviewing the notes on the initial TURBT pathology specimen, the surgeon who performed the TURBT and the details of the operation, whether any neo-adjuvant treatment (e.g. chemotherapy) was administered etc. Special attention was placed on the TURBT pathology specimen and thorough re-discussion with an uro-pathologist about all specimens was done. Factors that might have contributed to a pT0 cystectomy specimen were disclosed and a systematic review of the available literature (all articles in Pub-Med were searched including non-English publications using the keyword ‘pT0 radical cystectomy’) was performed in order to present possible factors leading to such favorable cystectomy specimens.

RESULTS

Five patients in our series (Table-1) submitted to radical cystectomy for bladder cancer had a final pathological stage of pT0 (no residual tumor). In all patients neither preoperative work-up (chest and computed tomography urogram) nor post-operative full lymph node dissection revealed any lymph node or metastatic spread. Four TURBT specimens were transitional cell carcinomas (TCC) and one was squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). The estimated macroscopic size of the TURBT tumor ranged from 5 mm to 4 cm. All operative notes from the TURBT reported a complete macroscopic clearance of the tumor with deep resection and additional biopsies from the tumor bed. No lymphovascular invasion was noted in none of the TURBT specimens. All the TURBTs were performed by two experienced senior urologists and the radical cystectomies were performed by 2 urological surgeons. The time from TURBT to radical cystectomy ranged from 120-210 days. Neo-adjuvant chemotherapy was administered to two patients. Follow-up after cystectomy ranged from 6 months to 69 months. Four patients are doing very well on follow-up. One died 45 months after the operation from other cause (cardiac event) and had no cancer recurrence.

Table 1
- Our series of pT0 radical cystectomies.

The literature review resulted in 11 articles (Table-2) after excluding case reports and small series as well as irrelevant publications and duplicates.

Table 2
- Series pT0 cystectomy patients.

DISCUSSION

Our series of pT0 radical cystectomies indicated a few factors that may be contributing to such a result (no tumor found on final cystectomy specimen). Obviously it would be very important to know if there are factors after a TURBT that should prompt treatment with bladder preservation strategies for muscle invasive or recurrent high risk superficial bladder cancer. This would obviously prevent patients from having a major operation like a radical cystectomy with urinary diversion, which have high morbidity and a deterioration in the quality of life. Herr (1212. Herr HW: Transurethral resection of muscle-invasive bladder cancer: 10-year outcome. J Clin Oncol. 2001; 19: 89-93.) found a 10-year disease-specific survival of cT2 patients who were treated with re-TURBT of 76% (57% had eventually their bladder preserved) compared with 71% for those who had immediate radical cystectomy. Although initially an older study (66. Thrasher JB, Frazier HA, Robertson JE, Paulson DF: Does of stage pT0 cystectomy specimen confer a survival advantage in patients with minimally invasive bladder cancer? J Urol. 1994; 152: 393-6.) found no advantage in cancer-specific survival for pT0 cystectomy patients (the study had low number of patients to draw statistically valid results) all subsequent studies (Table-2) have shown an advantage in recurrence-free survival or cancer-specific survival.

It seems that a macroscopic complete resection as reported by the surgeon in the operative notes was a factor contributing to a pT0 specimen. It has been suggested in other studies (1111. Loizaga Iriarte A, Senarriaga Ruiz de la Illa N, Lacasa Viscasillas I, Rábade Ferreiro A, Iriarte Soldevilla I, Unda Urzaiz M: Does a pT0 cystectomy specimen imply being tumour-free in the long term?. Actas Urol Esp. 2009; 33: 865-8.,1313. van Dijk PR, Ploeg M, Aben KK, Weijerman PC, Karthaus HF, van Berkel JT, et al.: Downstaging of TURBT-Based Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer by Radical Cystectomy Predicts Better Survival.) that a thorough and complete TURBT may be warranted in most patients who have even got an appearance of invasive tumor as when re-evaluating with a re-TURBT they may be candidates for bladder preservation especially if no residual tumor is present. Furthermore, a study (99. Volkmer BG, Kuefer R, Bartsch G Jr, Straub M, de Petriconi R, Gschwend JE, et al.: Effect of a pT0 cystectomy specimen without neoadjuvant therapy on survival. Cancer. 2005; 104: 2384-91.) confirmed that patients with a cT2a tumor stage on TURBT had significantly better cancer-specific survival when a pT0 stage was achieved at RC (with the use of neo-adjuvant chemotherapy) compared with those who had residual cancer on RC. As others (1414. May M, Bastian PJ, Burger M, Bolenz C, Trojan L, Herrmann E, et al.: Multicenter evaluation of the prognostic value of pT0 stage after radical cystectomy due to urothelial carcinoma of the bladder. BJU Int. 2011; 108: E278-83.) have suggested a radical TURBT is probably not causative of the improved cancer-specific survival in pT0 cystectomy patients but rather individual tumor characteristics allow for complete tumor eradication, including small tumor size, unifocality and stage T2a.

Another factor that was evident, even in large tumors measuring 3-4 cm, was the absence of lymphovascular invasion which seemed to consistently produce final pT0 radical cystectomy specimens in our series. Another study (1515. Kassouf W, Spiess PE, Brown GA, Munsell MF, Grossman HB, Siefker-Radtke A, et al.: P0 stage at radical cystectomy for bladder cancer is associated with improved outcome independent of traditional clinical risk factors. Eur Urol. 2007; 52: 769-74.) has also underlined the role of lymphovascular invasion as an independent factor of advanced tumor stage, grade and shorter overall and recurrence-free survival.

There was a source of bias for two of our patients who received neo-adjuvant chemotherapy and that might have contributed to a favorable result, however, we have to take into account that chemotherapy is a non-invasive treatment and may consist part of a multimodality approach for bladder-preserving techniques. It has been demonstrated in one study (1616. Grossman HB, Natale RB, Tangen CM, Speights VO, Vogelzang NJ, Trump DL, et al.: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus cystectomy compared with cystectomy alone for locally advanced bladder cancer. N Engl J Med. 2003; 349: 859-66. Erratum in: N Engl J Med. 2003; 349: 1880.) that the prognostic significance of a pT0 stage is independent of whether this was achieved by means of TURBT or neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. In the same study TURBT achieved a 15% pT0 rate at radical cystectomy, while neoadjuvant chemotherapy and TURBT achieved a 38% pT0 rate respectively. Others (77. Isbarn H, Karakiewicz PI, Shariat SF, Capitanio U, Palapattu GS, Sagalowsky AI, et al.: Residual pathological stage at radical cystectomy significantly impacts outcomes for initial T2N0 bladder cancer. J Urol. 2009; 182: 459-65; discussion 465.) claimed that neoadjuvant chemotherapy is not necessary or beneficial for downstaged cT2 tumors to pT0 by TURBT. On the contrary, another study (1717. Chromecki TF, Cha EK, Shariat SF; Bladder Cancer Research Consortium: Stage pT0 after radical cystectomy: are all patients equal? Eur Urol. 2011; 60: 603-4.) supported that patients who are pT0 after neoadjuvant chemotherapy are at higher risk of disease recurrence compared with those who achieve pT0 with TURBT alone (the explanation was that an increased rate of non-organ confined clinical stage was selected for chemotherapy in the study).

Furthermore, it has been found from studies that delay > 90 days for cystectomy is unfavorable (1818. Sánchez-Ortiz RF, Huang WC, Mick R, Van Arsdalen KN, Wein AJ, Malkowicz SB: An interval longer than 12 weeks between the diagnosis of muscle invasion and cystectomy is associated with worse outcome in bladder carcinoma. J Urol. 2003; 169: 110-5; discussion 115.) regarding prognosis. That was not confirmed in our study since even extreme delay up to 210 days did not affect the outcome. It seems that in three of our patients the TURBT cleared the tumor and in two more the addition of neo-adjuvant chemotherapy either consolidated such a result or eradicated any residual tumor. Other factors that have been mentioned in a study (1919. Tilki D, Svatek RS, Novara G, Seitz M, Godoy G, Karakiewicz PI, et al.: Stage pT0 at radical cystectomy confers improved survival: an international study of 4,430 patients. J Urol. 2010; 184: 888-94. Erratum in: J Urol. 2010; 184: 2218.) which are associated with a worse outcome for pT0 cystectomy patients were females and patients with nodal spread, however, these could not be assessed in our series. Also, the presence of concomitant carcinoma in situ is associated with disease progression but could be treated with intravesical BCG and closer follow-up (2020. Solsona E, Iborra I, Ricós JV, Monrós JL, Casanova J, Calabuig C: Feasibility of transurethral resection for muscle infiltrating carcinoma of the bladder: long-term followup of a prospective study. J Urol. 1998; 159: 95-8; discussion 98-9.).

Experience of the surgeon performing the TURBT might also play a role. All our patients were operated by experienced surgeons (> 50 procedures) and a standardized procedure was performed with the aim of completely removing the whole tumor including deep resection and also biopsy of its base. The base was then thoroughly diathermised with a rolleyball. It has been suggested that a ‘radical’ transurethral resection is justified when the tumor is clinically limited to the muscular layer and when all biopsies of the periphery and the base of the tumor are negative for further muscular invasion (2020. Solsona E, Iborra I, Ricós JV, Monrós JL, Casanova J, Calabuig C: Feasibility of transurethral resection for muscle infiltrating carcinoma of the bladder: long-term followup of a prospective study. J Urol. 1998; 159: 95-8; discussion 98-9.). This offered an 80.5% cancer-specific survival in 5 years with a bladder preservation rate of 82.7% (2020. Solsona E, Iborra I, Ricós JV, Monrós JL, Casanova J, Calabuig C: Feasibility of transurethral resection for muscle infiltrating carcinoma of the bladder: long-term followup of a prospective study. J Urol. 1998; 159: 95-8; discussion 98-9.).

Bladder sparing techniques have included re-TURBTs (1212. Herr HW: Transurethral resection of muscle-invasive bladder cancer: 10-year outcome. J Clin Oncol. 2001; 19: 89-93.), the use of chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy and also the use of re-TURBT with adjuvant radiotherapy and laparoscopic lymphadenectomy for high risk tumors (Grade 2 or 3) (2121. Geavlete P, Georgescu D, Florea I: Second transurethral resection and adjuvant radiotherapy in conservative treatment of pT2N0M0 bladder tumors. Eur Urol. 2003; 43: 499-504.). One very important multi-institutional trial (SPARE trial) comparing selective bladder preservation versus radical excision was abandoned in 2010 due to poor accrual (2222. Huddart RA, Hall E, Lewis R, Birtle A; SPARE Trial Management Group: Life and death of spare (selective bladder preservation against radical excision): reflections on why the spare trial closed. BJU Int. 2010; 106: 753-5.). The urological community has to learn by these mistakes and conduct relevant trials that will answer the important issue of bladder preservation.

The limitations of the study are that the number of patients is obviously small to extract valid statistical results but our aim was to identify in our series factors that would be worth investigating in a multi-institutional setting in order to increase validity. More than one surgeon performed the procedures but a standard operative technique was used as described earlier.

CONCLUSIONS

Four factors were identified in our study and could be investigated further: the absence of lymphovascular invasion and a complete resection which do have a favorable role, surgical experience and adherence to standardized techniques according to guidelines also contribute to such results. On the contrary, the time to cystectomy did not seem to have affected outcomes in our case series and that also remains to be confirmed. All these issues need to be clarified by the urologic community by designing and conducting multi-institutional randomized studies.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

RC = radical cystectomy

MIBC = muscle-invasive bladder cancer

TURBT = transurethral resection of bladder tumor

TCC = transitional cell carcinoma

SCC = squamous cell carcinoma

NAC = neo-adjuvant chemotherapy

REFERENCES

  • 1
    Hollenbeck BK, Miller DC, Dunn RL, Montie JE, Wei JT: The effects of stage divergence on survival after radical cystectomy for urothelial cancer. Urol Oncol. 2005; 23: 77-81.
  • 2
    Herr HW: The value of a second transurethral resection in evaluating patients with bladder tumors. J Urol. 1999; 162: 74-6.
  • 3
    Chang SS, Hassan JM, Cookson MS, Wells N, Smith JA Jr.: Delaying radical cystectomy for muscle invasive bladder cancer results in worse pathological stage. J Urol. 2003; 170: 1085-7.
  • 4
    Pagano F, Bassi P, Galetti TP, Meneghini A, Milani C, Artibani W, et al.: Results of contemporary radical cystectomy for invasive bladder cancer: a clinicopathological study with an emphasis on the inadequacy of the tumor, nodes and metastases classification. J Urol. 1991; 145: 45-50.
  • 5
    Shariat SF, Palapattu GS, Karakiewicz PI, Rogers CG, Vazina A, Bastian PJ, et al.: Discrepancy between clinical and pathologic stage: impact on prognosis after radical cystectomy. Eur Urol. 2007; 51: 137-49; discussion 149-51.
  • 6
    Thrasher JB, Frazier HA, Robertson JE, Paulson DF: Does of stage pT0 cystectomy specimen confer a survival advantage in patients with minimally invasive bladder cancer? J Urol. 1994; 152: 393-6.
  • 7
    Isbarn H, Karakiewicz PI, Shariat SF, Capitanio U, Palapattu GS, Sagalowsky AI, et al.: Residual pathological stage at radical cystectomy significantly impacts outcomes for initial T2N0 bladder cancer. J Urol. 2009; 182: 459-65; discussion 465.
  • 8
    Nielsen ME, Bastian PJ, Palapattu GS, Trock BJ, Schoenberg MP, Chan T, et al.: Recurrence-free survival after radical cystectomy of patients downstaged by transurethral resection. Urology. 2007; 70: 1091-5.
  • 9
    Volkmer BG, Kuefer R, Bartsch G Jr, Straub M, de Petriconi R, Gschwend JE, et al.: Effect of a pT0 cystectomy specimen without neoadjuvant therapy on survival. Cancer. 2005; 104: 2384-91.
  • 10
    Palapattu GS, Shariat SF, Karakiewicz PI, Bastian PJ, Rogers CG, Amiel G, et al.: Cancer specific outcomes in patients with pT0 disease following radical cystectomy. J Urol. 2006; 175: 1645-9; discussion 1649.
  • 11
    Loizaga Iriarte A, Senarriaga Ruiz de la Illa N, Lacasa Viscasillas I, Rábade Ferreiro A, Iriarte Soldevilla I, Unda Urzaiz M: Does a pT0 cystectomy specimen imply being tumour-free in the long term?. Actas Urol Esp. 2009; 33: 865-8.
  • 12
    Herr HW: Transurethral resection of muscle-invasive bladder cancer: 10-year outcome. J Clin Oncol. 2001; 19: 89-93.
  • 13
    van Dijk PR, Ploeg M, Aben KK, Weijerman PC, Karthaus HF, van Berkel JT, et al.: Downstaging of TURBT-Based Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer by Radical Cystectomy Predicts Better Survival.
  • 14
    May M, Bastian PJ, Burger M, Bolenz C, Trojan L, Herrmann E, et al.: Multicenter evaluation of the prognostic value of pT0 stage after radical cystectomy due to urothelial carcinoma of the bladder. BJU Int. 2011; 108: E278-83.
  • 15
    Kassouf W, Spiess PE, Brown GA, Munsell MF, Grossman HB, Siefker-Radtke A, et al.: P0 stage at radical cystectomy for bladder cancer is associated with improved outcome independent of traditional clinical risk factors. Eur Urol. 2007; 52: 769-74.
  • 16
    Grossman HB, Natale RB, Tangen CM, Speights VO, Vogelzang NJ, Trump DL, et al.: Neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus cystectomy compared with cystectomy alone for locally advanced bladder cancer. N Engl J Med. 2003; 349: 859-66. Erratum in: N Engl J Med. 2003; 349: 1880.
  • 17
    Chromecki TF, Cha EK, Shariat SF; Bladder Cancer Research Consortium: Stage pT0 after radical cystectomy: are all patients equal? Eur Urol. 2011; 60: 603-4.
  • 18
    Sánchez-Ortiz RF, Huang WC, Mick R, Van Arsdalen KN, Wein AJ, Malkowicz SB: An interval longer than 12 weeks between the diagnosis of muscle invasion and cystectomy is associated with worse outcome in bladder carcinoma. J Urol. 2003; 169: 110-5; discussion 115.
  • 19
    Tilki D, Svatek RS, Novara G, Seitz M, Godoy G, Karakiewicz PI, et al.: Stage pT0 at radical cystectomy confers improved survival: an international study of 4,430 patients. J Urol. 2010; 184: 888-94. Erratum in: J Urol. 2010; 184: 2218.
  • 20
    Solsona E, Iborra I, Ricós JV, Monrós JL, Casanova J, Calabuig C: Feasibility of transurethral resection for muscle infiltrating carcinoma of the bladder: long-term followup of a prospective study. J Urol. 1998; 159: 95-8; discussion 98-9.
  • 21
    Geavlete P, Georgescu D, Florea I: Second transurethral resection and adjuvant radiotherapy in conservative treatment of pT2N0M0 bladder tumors. Eur Urol. 2003; 43: 499-504.
  • 22
    Huddart RA, Hall E, Lewis R, Birtle A; SPARE Trial Management Group: Life and death of spare (selective bladder preservation against radical excision): reflections on why the spare trial closed. BJU Int. 2010; 106: 753-5.
  • 23
    Kaag MG, Milowsky MI, Dalbagni G, Thompson RH, Katz D, Reuter VE, et al.: Regional lymph node status in patients with bladder cancer found to be pathological stage T0 at radical cystectomy following systemic chemotherapy. BJU Int. 2011; 108: E272-7.
  • 24
    Volkmer BG, Kuefer R, Bartsch G Jr, Straub M, de Petriconi R, Gschwend JE, et al.: Effect of a pT0 cystectomy specimen without neoadjuvant therapy on survival. Cancer. 2005; 104: 2384-91.
  • 25
    Mallén Mateo E, Gil Martínez P, Gil Sanz MJ, Sancho Serrano C, Pascual Regueriro D, Rioja Sanz LA: Stage pT0 bladder tumors after radical cystectomy: a review of our series. Actas Urol Esp. 2006; 30: 763-71.
  • 26
    Cho KS, Seo JW, Park SY, Cho NH, Choi YD, Yang SC, et al.: The prognostic significance of pathologic stage T0 on organ-confined bladder transitional cell carcinoma following radical cystectomy. Urol Int. 2008; 81: 394-8.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    May/June 2013

History

  • Received
    28 Jan 2013
  • Accepted
    24 Apr 2013
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