Abstract
PurposeTo assess characteristics and outcome of patients treated with radiotherapy for muscle-invasive bladder cancer at 44 community-based radiotherapy centers and compare these to those on clinical trials. Materials and methodsWe reviewed 155 patients who had been treated from 2010 to 2014. Overall survival and progression-free survival were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Results were compared to a pooled analysis of 6 Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) protocols. ResultsWhat stood out was that our patients' characteristics were significantly inferior than those on RTOG studies: lower rate of complete transurethral resection of bladder tumor: 36.8% vs. 70% (P<0.0001), higher median age: 79 years vs. 66 (P<0.0001), more medically inoperable: (51.0%) vs. 0% in RTOG (P<0.001), and 46.9% had refused surgery. Fewer patients underwent concurrent chemotherapy: 56.1% vs. 100% (P<0.0001). It was also striking that at median follow-up 12.6 months (range: 3.1–49.2), the 36-month overall survival was 51.3% for those who refused surgery vs. 24.5% for medically inoperable (P = 0.009); 58.1% with complete transurethral resection of bladder tumor vs. 29.8% if incomplete (P = 0.07); 54.3% with chemoradiotherapy (CRT) vs. 17.2% without (P = 0.03); 66.3% for those who refused surgery and had CRT vs. 38.9% for medically inoperable who had CRT (P = 0.04). ConclusionsThe cohort at community-based centers was older, more medically inoperable, and less likely to receive CRT than clinical trial patients. This suggests that we may not be able to apply trial-derived regimens for many patients in this setting. There is a pressing need to find treatment options for such patients, especially given the aging population. Survival of medically operable CRT patients was comparable to results of RTOG protocols notwithstanding this study's smaller sample size, retrospective nature and suboptimal documentation of patient characteristics.
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