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Title: Clinical outcome in patients with locally advanced bladder carcinoma treated with conservative multimodality therapy. Author: George L, Bladou F, Bardou VJ, Gravis G, Tallet A, Alzieu C, Serment G, Salem N. Journal: Urology; 2004 Sep; 64(3):488-93. PubMed ID: 15351577. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To describe the outcome of patients with muscle-invasive bladder carcinoma treated with multimodality therapy in our institution from 1993 to 2002. METHODS: The charts of 60 patients with Stage T2-T4N0-N1M0 treated with transurethral resection of bladder tumor followed by a chemoradiotherapy combination were retrospectively reviewed. Of the 60 patients, 22 had received neoadjuvant chemotherapy (methotrexate, cisplatin, and vinblastine or methotrexate, adriamycin, cisplatin, and vinblastine) followed by concomitant chemoradiotherapy (weekly cisplatin/carboplatin or a cisplatin and 5-fluorouracil combination), and 38 had received concomitant chemoradiotherapy alone. Radiotherapy delivered a median dose of 45 Gy to the pelvis and 65 Gy to the bladder in a once-daily or twice-daily fractionation scheme. Follow-up evaluations included cystoscopy with biopsies at regular intervals. Salvage cystectomy was recommended in the case of local persistent tumor or bladder relapse. RESULTS: The median follow-up was 48.5 months (range 10 to 126). Of the 22 patients who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, 18 (82%) had received two or more cycles; 51 (85%) of the 60 patients received the concomitant chemotherapy as planned. Radiotherapy was completed in 56 patients. Twenty-eight patients developed relapse either locally (14 did not achieve a complete local response after chemoradiotherapy and 6 had true local relapse during follow-up) or at distant sites. The actuarial 5-year disease-specific survival and freedom from local and distant relapse rate was 54% and 42%, respectively. The actuarial local control rate with an intact bladder was 56% at 5 years. When stratified according to stage and grade, patients with Stage T2-T3, grade 2 tumors had a statistically significantly better chance of remaining relapse free than did the others (P = 0.045). Salvage cystectomy (n = 11) for isolated local failure in this population achieved limited results. CONCLUSIONS: Transurethral resection of bladder tumor with this chemoradiotherapy combination achieved satisfactory results in this unfavorable population with invasive bladder carcinoma.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]