Abstract

BackgroundLymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma (LELC) is a rare high-grade carcinoma that resembles nasopharyngeal lymphoepithelioma and can occur throughout the body. First reported in 1991, bladder LELC has an incidence of about 1% of all bladder carcinomas. Due to its rare occurrence, prognoses and ideal treatment guidelines have not been clearly defined.MethodsA PubMed search was performed using two terms, “lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma” and “bladder.” Review articles, articles in foreign languages, expression studies, and studies not performed in the bladder were excluded. We report a case of LELC of the bladder including treatment and outcome and performed a systematic review of all 36 available English literatures from 1991 to 2016 including the present case to identify factors affecting disease-free survival.ResultsOne hundred forty cases of bladder LELC were analyzed. The mean age of the patients was 70.1 years ranging from 43 to 90 years with 72% males and 28% females. Pure LELC occurs most often at 46% followed by mixed LELC 28% and predominant LELC 26%. EBV testing was negative in all cases tested. Mean follow-up length for all cases was 33.8 months with no evidence of disease in 62.2%, while 11.1% died of disease, 10.4% alive with metastasis, and 8.2% died without disease. 5.0% of cases had recurrence at an average of 31.3 months. Prognosis is significantly favorable for patients presenting with pure or predominant forms of LELC compared to mixed type (p < 0.0001). The treatment significantly associated with the highest disease mortality and lowest disease-free survival was TURBT alone when compared to any multi-modality treatment (p < 0.01).ConclusionWe conclude that the best treatment modality associated with the highest disease-free survival is multi-modal treatment including radical cystectomy.

Highlights

  • Lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma (LELC) is a rare high-grade carcinoma that resembles nasopharyngeal lymphoepithelioma and can occur throughout the body

  • We report a case of LELC in the bladder and performed a systematic review of all available English literature including the present case to evaluate factors affecting disease-free survival

  • A PubMed search was performed using two terms, “lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma” and “bladder.” Of the 63 results generated as of July 18th, 2016, 27 review articles, articles in foreign languages, expression studies, and studies not performed in the urinary bladder were excluded

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Summary

Introduction

Lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma (LELC) is a rare high-grade carcinoma that resembles nasopharyngeal lymphoepithelioma and can occur throughout the body. First reported in 1991, bladder LELC has an incidence of about 1% of all bladder carcinomas. Lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma (LELC) is a rare high-grade carcinoma that resembles nasopharyngeal lymphoepithelioma and has been reported to occur in other sites of the body such as gastrointestinal tract [1], liver [2], lung [3], skin [4], uterus [5], gallbladder [6], pancreas [7], kidney [8], and breast [9]. First reported in 1991 [10], LELC of the bladder appears to resemble LELC histologically in the nasopharynx but is a variant of urothelial carcinoma and has an incidence of about 1% of all bladder carcinomas [11]. Unlike other sites of the body, LELC in the bladder has not been associated with the presence of Epstein-Barr Virus to date [12]. We report a case of LELC in the bladder and performed a systematic review of all available English literature including the present case to evaluate factors affecting disease-free survival

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