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Selecting the Best Candidates for Cisplatin-based Adjuvant Chemotherapy After Radical Cystectomy Among Patients with pN+ Bladder Cancer

Authors :
Luca Afferi
Chiara Lonati
Francesco Montorsi
Alberto Briganti
Andrea Necchi
Andrea Mari
Andrea Minervini
Riccardo Tellini
Riccardo Campi
Gerald Bastian Schulz
Peter C. Black
Ettore di Trapani
Ottavio de Cobelli
R. Jeffrey Karnes
Mohamed Ahmed
M. Carmen Mir
Maria Asuncion Algarra
Michael Rink
Stefania Zamboni
Francesca Mondini
Claudio Simeone
Alessandro Antonelli
Alessandro Tafuri
Wojciech Krajewski
Bartosz Małkiewicz
Evanguelos Xylinas
Francesco Soria
Rafael Sanchez Salas
Amandeep Arora
Xavier Cathelineau
Kees Hendricksen
Maida Ammiwala
Marco Borghesi
Francesco Chierigo
Jeremy Yuen-Chun Teoh
Agostino Mattei
Simone Albisinni
Florian Roghmann
Mathieu Roumiguié
Anne Sophie Bajeot
Elisabeth Maier
Atiqullah Aziz
Rodolfo Hurle
Roberto Contieri
Benjamin Pradere
Roberto Carando
Cedric Poyet
Mario Alvarez-Maestro
David D'Andrea
Shahrokh F. Shariat
Marco Moschini
Source :
European urology oncology.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

A trend towards greater benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT) in pN+ bladder cancer (BCa) has been observed in multiple randomized controlled trials. However, it is still unclear which patients might benefit the most from this approach. We retrospectively analyzed a multicenter cohort of 1381 patients with pTany pN1-3 cM0 R0 urothelial BCa treated with radical cystectomy (RC) with or without cisplatin-based ACT. The main endpoint was overall survival (OS) after RC. We performed 1:1 propensity score matching to adjust for baseline characteristics and conducted a classification and regression tree (CART) analysis to assess postoperative risk groups and Cox regression analyses to predict OS. Overall, 391 patients (28%) received cisplatin-based ACT. After matching, two cohorts of 281 patients with pN+ BCa were obtained. CART analysis stratified patients into three risk groups: favorable prognosis (≤pT2 and positive lymph node [PLN] count ≤2; odds ratio [OR] 0.43), intermediate prognosis (≥pT3 and PLN count ≤2; OR 0.92), and poor prognosis (pTany and PLN count ≥3; OR 1.36). Only patients with poor prognosis benefitted from ACT in terms of OS (HR 0.51; p 0.001). We created the first algorithm that stratifies patients with pN+ BCa into prognostic classes and identified patients with pTany BCa with PLN ≥3 as the most suitable candidates for cisplatin-based ACT. PATIENT SUMMARY: We found that overall survival among patients with bladder cancer and evidence of lymph node involvement depends on cancer stage and the number of positive lymph nodes. Patients with more than three nodes affected by metastases seem to experience the greatest overall survival benefit from cisplatin-based chemotherapy after bladder removal. Our study suggests that patients with the highest risk should be prioritized for cisplatin-based chemotherapy after bladder removal.

Details

ISSN :
25889311
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European urology oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6d6feaac096d9d80eb1765610c041455