Abstract

Whether anesthesia can affect oncological outcomes in urothelial carcinoma of the upper urinary tract undergoing radical nephroureterectomy (RNU) is not clear. One-hundred an ninety-seven patients who underwent RNU were retrospectively recruited and divided into total intravenous (TIVA, n=90) and volatile inhalation anesthesia (VIA, n=107) groups. A 1:1 propensity score-matching method was employed to minimize selection bias (n=70 each). Cancer-specific (CSS), overall (OS) and metastasis-free (MFS) survival were compared between groups before and after matching. For all survival endpoints, no significant differences were observed between the two study groups, both before (hazard ratio for TIVA: CSS: 0.70, OS: 0.75, MFS: 0.78) and after (hazard ratios for TIV: CSS: 1.21, OS: 0.82, MFS: 0.84) matching. With no survival difference observed according to anesthetic technique for RNU, the choice should be based on factors such as accessibility, prevention of side-effects, or costs.

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