Abstract

PurposeParaganglioma of the urinary bladder (UBPGL) is a rare neuroendocrine tumor diagnosed in many patients only after surgery. We, therefore, assessed clinical clues relevant to presurgical diagnosis and clinical consequences in patients with a missed presurgical diagnosis of UBPGL.Materials and methodsCase reports describing a UBPGL (published from 1–1–2001 and 31–12–2020) were identified in Pubmed. Two authors independently performed data extraction and assessed data quality according to the PRISMA guideline. Patients were divided into two groups: UBPGL diagnosis before and after surgery.ResultsWe included 177 articles reporting 194 cases. In 90 (46.4%) patients, the UBPGL was diagnosed before and in 104 (53.6%) after surgery. In presurgically diagnosed UBPGL, hypertension and catecholamine-associated symptoms were 2- to 3-fold (p < 0.001) more frequent than in postsurgically diagnosed patients whereas hematuria was twofold (p = 0.003) more prevalent in those with postsurgical diagnosis. Hypertension was an independent factor for presurgical biochemical testing (OR 4.45, 95% CI 1.66–11.94) while hematuria (OR 0.23, 95% CI 0.09–0.60) was an independent factor for not performing presurgical biochemical testing. Most patients diagnosed after surgery were not pretreated with alpha-adrenoceptor blockade (95.2%), underwent more frequently transurethral resection instead of cystectomy (70.2% vs. 23.1%) and had more frequent peroperative complications and residual tumor mass.ConclusionsIn nearly half of all patients with a UBPGL, the diagnosis was not established before surgery. Hypertension and hematuria contributed independently to a presurgical diagnosis. Postsurgical diagnosis, which was associated with suboptimal presurgical and surgical management, resulted in more peroperative complications and incomplete tumor resections.

Highlights

  • Paragangliomas are neuroendocrine tumors that originate in extra-adrenal paraganglia [1]

  • We evaluated whether a diagnosis before or after first surgery would have led to differences in treatment, in surgical course or postoperative residual tumor

  • Our study shows that slightly more than half of patients with a UBPGL are not diagnosed before initial surgery

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Summary

Introduction

Paragangliomas are neuroendocrine tumors that originate in extra-adrenal paraganglia [1]. Its origin likely reflects development from paraganglia embedded in the muscular layer of the bladder wall [3]. Patients with UBPGL may show signs and symptoms caused by episodic secretion of catecholamines triggered by micturition. These include paroxysms of high blood pressure (BP), headache, sweating, palpitations, and nausea. Standard treatment for muscle-invasive tumors is partial or radical cystectomy while bladder tumors that are not muscle-invasive can be treated with transurethral resection (TUR) [4,5,6]. Since UBPGLs seem to originate from within the muscle layer of the urinary bladder, the preferred treatment of UBPGLs is either partial or radical cystectomy

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