Radical Cystectomy for Bladder Cancer Today—A Homogeneous Series Without Neoadjuvant Therapy
University of Bern · Swiss Continence Foundation
Abstract
Five hundred seven patients (age 66 +/- 12 years) with a mean follow-up time of 45 months (range, 0.1 to 176 months) were analyzed. Five-year recurrence-free and overall survival were, respectively, 73% and 62% for patients with organ-confined, lymph node-negative tumors (n = 217; pT2, pN0). Positive lymph nodes were found in 124 (24%) patients who had a 5-year recurrence-free (33%) or overall (26%) survival. Isolated local recurrences were observed in 3% of patients with organ-confined tumors ( pT2, pN0), and 13% with positive lymph nodes (any pT, pN+). Distant metastases developed in 25% of patients with organ-confined tumors, 37% with non-organ-confined tumors, and 51% with positive lymph nodes.
Despite negative preoperative staging, pelvic lymphadenectomy and cystectomy for bladder cancer reveal a high percentage of unsuspected nodal metastases (24%) that have a 25% chance for long-term survival. This procedure also ensures a low pelvic recurrence rate even in lymph node-positive patients, and patients with locally advanced cancer have a 56% probability of 5-year recurrence-free survival.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 25.84
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 21
Authors
7- SMStephan MadersbacherCorresponding
University of Bern, Swiss Continence Foundation
- WHWerner Hochreiter
University of Bern, Swiss Continence Foundation
- FCFiona C. Burkhard
University of Bern, Swiss Continence Foundation
- GNGeorge N. Thalmann
University of Bern, Swiss Continence Foundation
- HDHansjörg Danuser
University of Bern, Swiss Continence Foundation
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Cystectomy
- Lymph node
- Lymphadenectomy
- Bladder cancer
- Lymph
- Dissection (medical)
- Metastasis
- Good health and well-being