Abstract

Objectives The introduction of PSA in clinical practice has resulted in decreasing the death rate form prostate cancer and in a downward shift of the pathological stage in radical prostatectomy specimens. This seems not to be the case for bladder cancer. In order to verify this assumption, we have reviewed the charts of the patients operated on of radical prostatectomy and radical cystectomy between 1994 and 2006. METHODS 456 and 491 consecutive patients, respectively, underwent radical cystectomy and radical prostatectomy with bilateral lymph nodes dissection. We excluded all the patients who had received neoadjuvant treatment or did not undergo node dissection. The patients were divided into two consecutive groups according to the year of treatment: group 1 included pts treated from 1994 to 2000, and group 2 pts from 2001 to 2006. The histopathological findings of the two groups of pts were compared. The difference among TNM systems has been balanced evaluating histopathological reports critically and converting them to the 2002 edition. RESULTS. For patients with prostate cancer, those in group 2 had a decrease in the incidence of extracapsular extension and lymph nodes invasion. The bladder cancer patients belonging to group 2 had a greater number of T2, but there was an increased number of pN+ in this group. CONCLUSIONS Even if there is a decline in locally advanced disease in patients with bladder cancer, our retrospective analysis did not show a comparable success in early diagnosis as it did for prostate cancer. There is undoubtedly an increase in the lymph node dissemination, whether this is due to a more extended lymph node dissection or to a premature dissemination remains questionable. Public awareness regarding bladder cancer and its risk factors is limited, but several studies have reported that a delay in diagnosis of invasive bladder cancer is an adverse prognostic factor. A higher care in the development of new diagnostic markers for bladder tumors and especially in the screening protocols together with an earlier radical therapy could hopefully improve the management of such a pathology, as it happened for prostate cancer.

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