Abstract

BackgroundRadical cystectomy remains the gold standard for local control of muscle-invasive bladder cancer. Despite that, a significant proportion of patients develop disease recurrence. Several predictors for recurrence have been described and the implication of such factors on development of recurrence will help in modification of treatment strategies to improve the prognosis of bladder cancer patients. Patients and MethodsThis is a retrospective study carried on patients with muscle-invasive urothelial carcinoma who underwent radical cystectomy at the National Cancer Institute in 3 years; January 2007 to December 2009, and analyzed for the development of recurrence and potential risk factors. ResultsThe 3-year disease-free survival (DFS) rate was 56%. Seventy patients (37%) developed disease recurrence during the follow-up period. Of these recurrences, 17 patients (24.3%) developed local and/or regional recurrences, 45 patients (64.3%) developed distant metastasis, and 8 patients (11.4%) developed local and/or regional and distant recurrences. In univariate analysis, lymph node metastasis (P < .001), lymphovascular invasion (LVI) (P < .001), high grade (P = .005), and advanced tumor stage (P = .002) were significantly associated with development of recurrence. In multivariate analysis, lymph node metastasis, LVI, and high grade were significantly associated with tumor recurrence and poor DFS. ConclusionLymph node metastasis, LVI, and high tumor grade were independent prognostic factors that affected tumor recurrence and DFS. LVI status should be reported in radical cystectomy specimens to help in risk assessment of patients especially in node-negative cases.

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