Abstract

The clinicopathological features predictive of outcome in patients with upper urinary tract transitional cell carcinoma are not clearly established. We analyzed the prognostic impact of tumor necrosis with respect to metastasis-free survival. The presence of focal (10% or less of the tumor area) and extensive (greater than 10% of the tumor area) coagulative tumor necrosis was retrospectively reevaluated in 268 cases of consecutive upper urinary tract transitional cell carcinoma and correlated with outcome. Overall tumor necrosis was noted in 113 of 268 (42.2%) cases of transitional cell carcinoma with 63 (23.5%) showing focal and 50 (18.7%) showing extensive necrosis, respectively. Tumor necrosis was associated with high tumor stage (p <0.001) and high tumor grade (p <0.001). In addition, tumor necrosis was more common in pelvic tumors compared with ureteral tumors (p <0.001). Actuarial 5-year metastasis-free survival rates for patients with transitional cell carcinoma with extensive, focal and lacking necrosis were 24%, 45% and 78%, respectively (log rank test p <0.001). Multivariate analysis proved pT stage greater than 1 (p <0.001, RR 6.04, 95% CI 2.82-12.93), high tumor grade (p <0.001, RR 3.37, 95% CI 1.65-6.89) and extensive tumor necrosis as independent predictors of poor patient outcome (p = 0.02, RR 1.82, 95% CI 1.09-3.05). The presence of extensive tumor necrosis proved to be an additional histological variable with an independent influence on metastasis-free survival in patients with upper urinary tract transitional cell carcinoma. Its assessment is readily applicable in routine sections and should thus be commented upon separately in the pathology report.

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