Abstract

469 Background: Although there have been changes in the treatment paradigm of patients with upper tract urothelial carcinoma (UTUC) over the past 2 decades, there is limited data on the particular management strategies and associated outcomes. We evaluated surgical trends, perioperative management, and oncologic outcomes of patients who underwent radical nephroureterectomy (RNU) for UTUC at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center over a 24-year period. Methods: Between 1995 and 2018, we identified 760 patients with UTUC who underwent RNU. 15 had multiple RNU and we kept only the first procedure for analysis. Generalized additive models were fitted to examine the association between date of surgery and continuous while generalized additive models with a logit link were used to estimate categorical variables. As surgical approach was defined using three different categories (open, laparoscopic and robotic) a generalized additive multinomial model was used. Generalized additive cox proportional hazards models were used to estimate the association between surgery date and estimate 2-year cancer-specific survival. Results: The use of pre-operative diagnostic endoscopic biopsies also increased from 12% to 72% which coincides with an increased proportion high grade disease on final pathology from 55% to 91%. The rate of open RNU declined from 100% to 54% with a coinciding rise in the utilization of minimally invasive approaches. Laparoscopy peaked in 2008 and then was subsequently replaced by the robotic approach. Mean lymph node yield increased over the study interval with more retroperitoneal lymph node dissections performed. Utilization of neoadjuvant chemotherapy also increased over time with a current rate of 31%, coinciding with an increase in pT0 rate from only 2% to 9%.The 2-year cancer specific survival probability has improved from 76% to 87% over the study period. Conclusions: Several changes in treatment patterns for patients with UTUC over the past 2 decades appear to correspond with an improvement of oncologic outcomes. How these changes directly relate to each other requires further investigation.

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