Abstract

Reliable factors predicting the disease course of non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) with carcinoma in situ (CIS) are unavailable. Molecular subtypes have potential for prognostic stratification of muscle-invasive bladder cancer, while their value for CIS patients is unknown. Here, the prognostic impact of both clinico-pathological parameters, including CIS focality, and immunohistochemistry-based surrogate subtypes was analyzed in a cohort of high-risk NMIBC patients with CIS. In 128 high-risk NMIBC patients with CIS, luminal (KRT20, GATA3, ERBB2) and basal (KRT5/6, KRT14) surrogate markers as well as p53 were analyzed in 213–231 biopsies. To study inter-lesional heterogeneity of CIS, marker expression in independent CIS biopsies from different bladder localizations was analyzed. Clinico-pathological parameters and surrogate subtypes were correlated with recurrence-free (RFS), progression-free (PFS), cancer-specific (CSS), and overall survival (OS). Forty-six and 30% of CIS patients exhibited a luminal-like (KRT20-positive, KRT5/6-negative) and a null phenotype (KRT20-negative, KRT5/6-negative), respectively. A basal-like subtype (KRT20-negative, KRT5/6-positive) was not observed. A significant degree of inter-lesional CIS heterogeneity was noted, reflected by 23% of patients showing a mixed subtype. Neither CIS surrogate subtype nor CIS focality was associated with patient outcome. Patient age and smoking status were the only potentially independent prognostic factors predicting RFS, PFS, OS, and PFS, respectively. In conclusion, further clarification of heterogeneity of surrogate subtypes in HR NMIBC and their prognostic value is of importance with regard to potential implementation of molecular subtyping into clinical routine. The potential prognostic usefulness of patient age and smoking status for high-risk NMIBC patients with CIS needs further validation.

Highlights

  • Bladder cancer (BC) is the most common malignancy of the urinary tract: an estimated number of 549,000 new cases and Institute of Pathology, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Pauwelsstr. 30, 52074 Aachen, GermanyInstitute of Pathology, Helios University Hospital Wuppertal, Wuppertal, GermanyDepartment of Urology, Helios University Hospital Wuppertal, Wuppertal, Germany200,000 deaths were registered in 2018 worldwide [1]

  • The main characteristics of the HR NMIBC patients with carcinoma in situ (CIS) are summarized in detail in Table 1 and only a few data central to the topic may be pointed out

  • The European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) scoring system for instance was developed on the basis of survival data from NMIBC patients mostly without CIS, and predominantly treated by chemotherapy [23]

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Summary

Introduction

Muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) has an unfavorable prognosis (5-year survival

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Results
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