Abstract

ABSTRACTIntroductionCarcinosarcoma of the bladder is a very rare neoplasm. The pathogenesis of carcinosarcomas is not clearly understood and remains a subject of debate. Whilst there is some research conceptualizing the histopathological findings of bladder carcinosarcomas, the demographic features, clinical outcomes, prognosis and treatment options remain unclear.Materials and MethodsWe analyzed 12 consecutive cases of patients with sarcoma-toid bladder cancer who were treated surgically at a single Urology Department be-tween 1999 and 2015. Radiology, pathology and surgical reports were reviewed to determine the pathological staging at the time of cystectomy. These were directly compared with 230 patients having cystectomies for urothelial cell carcinoma. The sarcomatoid patients, were compared to patients with urothelial cell cancers. The other histological sub types, squamous cell (17), neuroendocrine (9), metastatic (7), mixed (4), adenocarcinoma (3), were not included.Results and conclusionCarcinosarcoma of the urinary bladder is often described in the literature as a highly malignant neoplasm that is rapidly lethal. We found that the sarcoma does not offer a worse prognosis than conventional high-grade urothelial car-cinoma. There is no significant difference in grade, stage, positive surgical margin rate, nodal involvement, associated prostate cancer or incidence rates of progression, all cause or disease specific mortality. There was a barely significant difference in carcinoma in-situ. However, carcinosarcomas are three times the volume of urothelial cell tumors which may contribute to its reputation as an aggressive tumour (44cc v 14cc). Sarcomatous elements do not appear, from our small study, to bestow a worse prognosis.

Highlights

  • Carcinosarcoma of the bladder is a very rare neoplasm

  • Whilst there is some research conceptualizing the histopathological findings of bladder carcinosarcomas, the demographic features, clinical outcomes, prognosis and treatment options remain unclear

  • Our patients showed a variety of subtypes with both epithelial and sarcomatous elements (Table-1)

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Summary

Introduction

Carcinosarcoma of the bladder is a very rare neoplasm. The pathogenesis of carcinosarcomas is not clearly understood and remains a subject of debate. Pathology and surgical reports were reviewed to determine the pathological staging at the time of cystectomy These were directly compared with 230 patients having cystectomies for urothelial cell carcinoma. A comparative genomic hybridization stuibju | Sarcomatoid carcinoma of the bladder dy undertaken by Völker et al [2] suggests that the epithelial and mesenchymal components of cases revealed important similarities. Remnants of epithelial cell surface markers and ultrastructural features were shown to be present in mesenchymal and sarcomatoid components. They hypothesize that carcinosarcomas are the end products of different pathways of differentiation of upstream totipotential neoplastic cells. It should be noted that the tumour components showed clonal identity which would support a monoclonal origin [4,5,6]

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