Audio-Digest Foundation: urology

Main Written Summaries Listing | Urology: 2008 Listings
Audio-Digest FoundationUrology


Volume 31, Issue 05
May 1, 2008

The following is an abstracted summary, not a verbatim transcript, of the lectures/discussions on this audio program. If, after reviewing this written summary, you would like to hear the contents and/or earn CME/CE credit, simply visit the Audio-Digest Foundation website

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MANAGEMENT OF BLADDER CANCER: A SURGEON'S PERSPECTIVE

From the 28th Annual Jackson Hole Urologic Conference

John Peter Stein, MD, Professor of Urology, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles




Educational Objectives

The goal of this program is to elucidate current concepts in the surgical management of bladder cancer. After hearing and assimilating this program, the clinician will be better able to:
1. Assess the rationale for performing early cystectomy in patients with grade 3 T1 tumors.
2. Implement an appropriate treatment for grade 3 T1 tumors.
3. Compare the relative clinical merits of radical cystectomy and prostate-sparing cystectomy.
4. Evaluate the long-term results of standard radical cystectomy for invasive bladder cancer.
5. Discuss techniques for managing urethral disease after radical cystectomy.

Faculty Disclosure

In adherence to ACCME Standards for Commercial Support, Audio-Digest requires all faculty and members of the planning committee to disclose relevant financial relationships within the past 12 months that might create any personal conflicts of interest. Any identified conflicts were resolved to ensure that this educational activity promotes quality in health care and not a proprietary business or commercial interest. For this program, Dr. Stein reported nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements


Dr. Stein gave his scientific lectures at the 28th Annual Jackson Hole Urologic Conference, presented January 26 to February 1, 2008, in Jackson Hole, WY, by the University of Colorado School of Medicine and Jackson Hole Seminars, Inc. The Audio-Digest Foundation thanks Dr. Stein and the sponsors for their cooperation in the production of this program.


EARLY CYSTECTOMY FOR GRADE 3 T1 TUMORS
Grade 3 T1 tumors: lethal; progress to invasion; constitute 25% of all bladder cancers; patients with combination of T1 tumor and carcinoma in situ (CIS)—constitute 50% of cases; at risk for progression, recurrence, and death; data—extravesical recurrences can develop in upper urinary tract and prostatic urethra; bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) therapy does not provide durable progression-free benefit; rule of one-thirds—one-third of patients never develop recurrence and can retain their bladders; one-third die of bladder cancer; one-third require cystectomy; assessing risk for progression— depth of disease penetration into muscularis mucosae; CIS; lymphovascular invasion; early response to intravesical therapy; persistent T1 disease on transurethral resection (TUR); molecular markers (conventional markers do not identify true malignant potential of T1 tumor)
Cystectomy: given similar outcomes, bladder preservation with TUR and intravesical therapy preferable to cystectomy; rationale for cystectomy—risk for clinical understaging associated with T1 disease; continued risk for local and distant disease progression; improvement in morbidity and mortality rates; provides pathologic staging data and indices to determine need for adjuvant therapy; ability of orthotopic and nerve-sparing procedure to improve patient’s quality of life (QOL)
Observations on radical cystectomy: patients who have been clinically understaged do less well (counsel surgical candidates with T1 disease that 14%-15% of cystectomy patients have lymph node-positive disease at surgery and face increased risk for progression); upper tract and prostatic urethral involvement—incidence 20%; difficult to treat with conservative therapy; outcomes—long-term survival excellent after radical cystectomy for local, bladder-confined, node- negative disease; when it occurs, local recurrence tends to be lethal; combination of cystectomy and orthotopic diversion—reduces risk for urethral recurrence; eliminates need for stoma and urostomy appliance; enables most patients to void to completion and achieve good daytime and nighttime continence; point—early cystectomy achieves better survival rates than postponing surgery until muscle invasion occurs
Conservative therapy: considerations when contemplating bladder preservation—tumors can progress; one-third of patients die of disease; patients require long-term follow-up; TUR and multiple intravesical therapies may be necessary; recommendations—be diligent with follow-up; understand tumor biology and natural progression; know when to abandon conservative therapy in favor of more aggressive treatment
Early cystectomy: risk factors suggesting need for procedure—large T1 tumor (if unresectable by TUR, proceed with cystectomy); T1 tumor with associated CIS; lymphovascular invasion; pathologic subtypes of concern (eg, aggressive micropapillary, neuroendocrine and small-cell tumors; may require systemic chemotherapy before cystectomy; intravesical chemotherapy contraindicated); invasion deep into lamina propria; involvement of prostate and prostatic urethra (in 30%- 50% of patients, disease involves prostatic urethra, ducts, or stroma); persistent T1 disease on repeat TUR; early failure after intravesical therapy; surgeon should—review tissue slides with pathologist; be familiar with risk factors, including lymphovascular invasion and deep penetration through muscularis mucosae; rationale for performing early cystectomy— risk for progression and death after intravesical therapy; risk for clinical understaging; superior survival rate and local control; ability to use accurate pathologic staging to determine need for adjuvant therapy; improvements in QOL provided by orthotopic diversion and nerve-sparing technique

Treatment Algorithm


RADICAL CYSTECTOMY vs PROSTATE-SPARING CYSTECTOMY
High-grade invasive bladder cancer: lethal; >50% of patients who undergo cystectomy have extravesical tumor extension and node-positive disease; issues to consider when selecting therapy—oncology; functional outcomes; QOL; fertility
Prostate-sparing cystectomy (PSC): improves continence rates and potency; may allow for future fertility; does not violate oncologic principles; patient selection not problematic
Conclusions from review of oncologic data: prostate cancer in men undergoing cystectomy, and bladder cancer involving prostate—incidence high; tumors significant and difficult to identify; cystectomy—required when preserving prostate in men with bladder cancer; requirement has profound oncologic implications for younger men considering PSC
Oncologic concerns with PSC: long-term follow-up necessary to determine true oncologic implications; data show— pelvic recurrences tend to be lethal; dramatic increase in risk for distant metastases in young men who had preoperative transurethral resection of prostate (TURP); compared to men with pathologic organ-confined disease who underwent standard radical cystectomy, men undergoing PSC had higher rate of distant failure (problem may be related to venous emboli of tumor)
Standard radical cystectomy with nerve-sparing approach: patient selection critical; potency rates 30% to 50% (may be higher in young patients); local recurrences lethal; appropriate lymphadenectomy required for all patients; urethral anastomosis can be performed in patients undergoing radical cystectomy; local recurrence rates not compromised by—frozen section analysis of urethral margin in candidates for standard cystectomy; nerve-sparing cystectomy (postoperative potency rates related to patient age)
Standard radical cystectomy: daytime and nighttime continence good after cystectomy with orthotopic neobladder; points—if patients followed long enough after cystectomy, physician will likely see development of hypercontinence in some men; PSC achieves outstanding continence rate and offers clear benefit of preserving potency; radical cystoprostatectomy with orthotopic neobladder associated with good QOL
Radical cystoprostatectomy: best oncologic operation; orthotopic diversion performed easily and achieves excellent outcomes; nerve-sparing approach performed in appropriately selected patients; achieves good QOL; fertility—not major concern with cystoprostatectomy (mean patient age, 66-67 yr); problems with prostate-sparing approach designed to minimize risk to continence and potency without compromising oncologic outcome—technique for dividing bladder neck increases potential for tumor spill; prostate cancer difficult to detect preoperatively; bladder cancer can involve prostate and stroma; cure rate poor; no good oncologic reason for preserving seminal vesicles; accuracy of frozen section analysis difficult to assess
Conclusions: radical cystoprostatectomy vs PSC—long-term oncologic outcomes excellent with standard radical cystectomy, questionable with PSC; daytime continence similar for both procedures (often age-dependent); nighttime continence improved with radical surgery; potency better in prostate-sparing group; QOL similar in both groups; patient selection easier for those individuals undergoing standard radical cystoprostatectomy; radical cystoprostatectomy best therapeutic option
RADICAL CYSTECTOMY FOR INVASIVE BLADDER CANCER: LONG-TERM RESULTS OF A STANDARD PROCEDURE
Radical cystectomy for high-grade invasive bladder cancer: provides best survival and lowest local recurrence rates; technical advances have reduced surgery-related morbidity and mortality; urinary tract reconstruction improves QOL; no equally effective therapeutic alternative available
Data from patients who underwent radical cystectomy: therapy—included extended lymph node dissection followed by adjuvant chemotherapy in postoperative setting; adjuvant irradiation ineffective; caveats—necessary to advise patients of 2% to 3% mortality rate; one-third of patients develop postoperative complications (dehydration most common problem requiring hospitalization); complications—no difference in perioperative morbidity and mortality among patients undergoing incontinent vs continent urinary diversion; postoperative complication rates similar, regardless of whether adjuvant therapy administered; survival curve data—most deaths occurring during first 2.5 to 3.0 yr related to bladder cancer; at 3 yr, comorbid disease primary cause of death; radical cystectomy achieves durable results (late recurrences uncommon); pathologic stage—key risk factor in patients undergoing cystectomy; recurrence-free rate 82% in patients with organ-confined lymph node-negative disease (no difference in outcomes between P1 and P2 disease confined to bladder wall); good results in patients with extravesical lymph node-negative disease; prognosis worst for patients with lymph node-positive disease
Recurrence: defined as local or distant (both potentially fatal); local control good, ie, recurrence after radical cystectomy 5%; recurrence stratified by pathologic subgroup—lymph node-positive disease (good local control achieved with appropriate lymph node dissection); organ-confined disease (local recurrence rate 2%)
Lymph node-positive disease: found in 25% of patients during cystectomy; incidence correlates with increasing primary bladder tumor stage; risk factors—tumor burden; number of positive lymph nodes (chance of survival varies inversely with number of positive nodes); primary bladder tumor (patients with organ-confined tumor have better long-term survival than individuals with extravesical disease); lymph node density—key concept; defined as number of lymph nodes involved, divided by number of lymph nodes removed; helps stratify patients with node-positive disease; lymph node packets—when compared to en bloc excision, removing lymph node packets for evaluation increased total number of lymph nodes removed at time of cystectomy; extended lymph node dissection—important to overall outcome; takes longer to accomplish but can cure one-third of patients with node-positive disease; systemic chemotherapy—ineffective and cannot compensate for poor surgery
Cystectomy: computed tomography (CT)—obtain before surgery; look for obvious nodal disease preoperatively; evaluate accessory lower pole renal arteries
Additional considerations: orthotopic diversion—performed in most patients; achieves good continence results; does not compromise local and urethral recurrence rates; clinical observations about successful surgery—surgical factors, not neoadjuvant chemotherapy, considered most important predictors of outcome; extended lymph node dissection and surgical margin status especially important for achieving success; pathologic stage and lymph node status also contribute to outcome
Conclusions about treatment of high-grade invasive bladder cancer: radical cystectomy—ideal therapy; achieves excellent local control; reduces local recurrence and incidence of distant metastases, compared to other options; improved technique and orthotopic reconstruction have enhanced QOL; point—chemotherapy will not cover surgical errors and mistakes; surgery remains key to successful outcome
URETHRAL MANAGEMENT AFTER RADICAL CYSTECTOMY
Introduction: with evolution of urinary diversion, urethral management becoming more important; orthotopic diversion—performed in 80% to 90% of patients; changing management of patients who have undergone radical cystectomy
Urethral recurrence: 9% to 10% incidence ; etiology difficult to define—synchronous (unrecognized transitional cell carcinoma [TCC] at time of cystectomy; positive margin; tumor spillage or implantation); metachronous (most common cause; may be related to de novo panurothelial disease); risk factors in men—multifocality; CIS; involvement of bladder neck; upper tract TCC; form of urinary diversion; prostatic involvement
Recurrence in men who underwent radical cystectomy, followed by orthotopic or cutaneous diversion: similar pathologic characteristics, pathologic stage, and prostate involvement in both groups; independent predictors of urethral recurrence include prostatic involvement (stromal involvement associated with greatest risk) and form of urinary diversion (estimated probability of recurrence highest in men undergoing cutaneous diversion)
Key points: orthotopic diversion associated with lower risk for urethral recurrence; intraoperative frozen section analysis of urethra considered appropriate and accurate method of selecting candidates for reconstruction; prostatic involvement does not exclude patient from undergoing orthotopic diversion (patient selection depends on results of frozen section analysis)
Management: 60% of patients with urethral recurrence present with symptoms (one-third have positive cytology); complaints at presentation—blood from urethra; pain; palpable mass; change in voiding pattern; total urethrectomy— preferred; outcomes mandate aggressive approach; options—distal urethrectomy alone or intraurethral 5-flurouracil cream not recommended; systemic chemotherapy; points—symptomatic patient does not have worse outcome than patient whose cancer detected by urinary cytology; outcomes not affected by method or time to diagnosis, and primary pathologic subgroup of urethral recurrence; points—urethral recurrence, not stage of bladder disease, drives mortality rates; presence of superficial (vs invasive) disease determines survival
Conclusions: urethral recurrence lethal long-term problem requiring careful follow-up; most patients symptomatic; prostatic involvement high-risk situation, requiring aggressive management and annual cystoscopic evaluation; 80% of patients who have undergone orthotopic diversion have some red blood cells in urine (any patient with gross hematuria and blood spotting should undergo cystoscopy); points—outcomes generally poor; patients require urethrectomy; urethral invasion probably most important prognostic factor determining overall survival

Suggested Reading

Clark PE et al: The management of urethral transitional cell carcinoma after radical cystectomy for invasive bladder cancer. J Urol 172:1342, 2004; Cookson MS et al: The treated natural history of high risk superficial bladder cancer: 15 year outcome. J Urol 158:62, 1997; Hautmann RE, Stein JP: Neobladder with prostatic capsule and seminal–sparing cystectomy for bladder cancer: a step in the wrong direction. Urol Clin N Am 32:177, 2005; Herr HW et al: Impact of the number of lymph nodes retrieved on outcome in patients with muscle invasive bladder cancer. J Urol 167:1295, 2002; Herr HW, Donat SM: Prostatic tumor relapse in patient with superficial bladder tumors: 15 year outcome. J Urol 161:1854, 1999; Herr HW, Sogani PC: Does early cystectomy improve the survival of patient with high risk superficial bladder tumors. J Urol 166:12960, 2001; Stein JP: Indications for early cystectomy. Urology 62:591, 2003; Stein JP et al: Radical cystectomy in the treatment of invasive bladder cancer: long-term results in 1054 patients. J Clin Oncol 19:666, 2001; Stein JP et al: Risk factors for patients with pelvic lymph node metastases following radical cystectomy with en bloc cystectomy: the concept of lymph node density. J Urol 170:35, 2003; Stein JP et al: Urethral tumor recurrence following cystectomy and urinary diversion: clinical and pathological characteristics in 768 male patients. J Urol 173:1163, 2005; Vallancien G et al: Cystectomy with prostate sparing for bladder cancer in 100 patients: 10-year experience. J Urol 168:2413, 2002.

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