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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The finding of muscle-infiltrative
bladder cancer
is generally considered ominous, as 50% of patients who present with this condition are likely to develop distant
metastases
within 2 years. However, some types of infiltrative
bladder cancer
appear to have a less ominous prognosis. In order to assess the results of various therapies on regionally advanced
bladder cancer
, it is important to characterize the distinctions between the types with a poor prognosis (5-year survival rate 15% to 30%) and those with a better prognosis (5-year survival rate 50% to 85%). The former have a nodular architecture, infiltrate more deeply and in a tentacular pattern, and more often involve the bladder wall vasculature and lymphatics than does the latter type, which has papillary architecture and infiltrates on a broad front. These two types appear to respond differently to various treatments except systemic chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Treatment of regionally advanced bladder cancer. An overview. 144 Oct 25
Integrating systemic chemotherapy into the treatment of patients with invasive
bladder cancer
, where the majority of deaths are from systemic relapse, is crucial if survival is to be improved. However, the global recommendation of a single treatment approach for all patients is becoming outdated as several groups have found that appropriately selected patients enjoy comparable survival whether treated by transurethral resection alone or by partial or radical cystectomy. Thus, refining case selection becomes a critical area of investigation. Patients with a high risk of systemic relapse should be considered for systemic therapy early in the course of the disease, ideally as part of a clinical trial. The availability of growth factors has reduced the toxicities of the regimens currently in use. Improvements in assessing biologic potential are required, so that treatment recommendations will allow patients the maximal chance of cure and maintenance of organ function, while minimizing toxicities in patients for whom systemic approaches are unwarranted. Of interest are recent reports that G-CSF may enhance tumor sensitivity to methotrexate in vitro and increase the sensitivity of implanted urothelial tumors to chemotherapy in nude mice. Such findings suggest an expanded role for these agents. Unfortunately, simple escalation of all components of a combination regimen does not appear to be a viable strategy, as it is unlikely to significantly increase CR proportions without prohibitive toxicities. However, as more is understood about drug resistance, and in particular its development in vivo, better sequencing of the available of options should be possible. The availability of effective salvage therapies suggests that this is an appropriate therapeutic approach. In addition, a number of strategies aimed at reversing the mdr phenotype are under study. These include calcium channel blockers such as verapamil, cyclosporin, and tamoxifen. Alternatively, some groups are investigating transfecting the mdr gene into bone marrow cells to reduce the sensitivity of these cells to cytotoxic agents. These novel designs can be tested both in patients with
metastatic disease
and in patients with locally advanced (T3b, T4, and N+) disease, who have a high risk of metastatic failure and low CR proportions to available regimens.
...
PMID:Systemic chemotherapy in regionally advanced bladder cancer. Theoretical considerations and results. 144 Oct 29
Bladder cancer
ranks as the third most common malignancy among men and tenth among women. Superficial transitional cell carcinomas (stage Ta, Tis, and T1) account for approximately 70-80% of these tumors, while the remaining 20-30% are invasive (T2, T3, and T4). Approximately 70% of superficial tumors will have one or more recurrences, with 25% of these expressing a higher histologic grade and 10-15% subsequently developing invasive and/or
metastatic disease
. The detection and prediction of tumor recurrence and/or tumor progression is crucially important if timely and appropriate therapy is to be instituted. Conventional histopathologic evaluation usually provides definitive diagnosis upon which therapeutic planning is based. However, at present there are no more reliable morphologic indicator to identify which individuals will have recurrent disease or who will progress to invasive and/or
metastatic cancer
. Recent advances in tumor biology have identified markers that are good candidates for clinical applications in early tumor detection, as well as for the stratification of patients with like-appearing morphological lesions with different biological and clinical behavior. The ultimate goal is to develop predictive assays that would segregate patients with high probability of failures versus patients who would be cured by localized modes of therapy.
...
PMID:Cell surface differentiation antigens of normal urothelium and bladder tumors. 146
A retrospective analysis of 59 patients with renal pelvic and ureter cancer (56 transitional cell carcinomas, 2 squamous cell carcinomas, and 1 adenocarcinoma), which were treated surgically, was performed in relation to postoperative recurrence, particularly distant metastasis. Of the 59 cases, postoperative recurrences developed as distant metastasis in 9 cases (15.3%), as
bladder cancer
in 19 cases (32.2%) and as contralateral renal pelvic and ureter cancer (bilateral metachronous cancer) in 3 cases (5.1%). Three of the 9 cases with the development of distant metastasis were squamous cell carcinoma or adenocarcinoma, and the others transitional cell carcinoma. All the
metastases
occurred within 2 years. In cases with transitional cell carcinoma, nonpapillary tumor, grade 3, high stage (pT3 and pT4), positive vascular invasion and IFN beta or gamma had a significant influence on the rate of distant metastasis. On the other hand, location, diversity and previous or coexistent
bladder cancer
did not seem to be related to the frequency of the development of distant metastasis. Thus, tumor aggressiveness was the only predictive valuable of the development of distant metastasis after surgery for renal pelvic and ureter cancer.
...
PMID:[Recurrence following surgery for primary renal pelvic and ureter cancer--clinicopathologic analysis of distant metastasis]. 149 3
We attempt to define the treated natural history of patients with superficial bladder tumors (stages Ta, TIS and T1) managed with intravesical bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) to determine the best form of treatment for locally recurrent tumors. The management and survival of 41 patients who failed BCG within the bladder or prostatic urethra and who subsequently were treated with a variety of secondary therapies are reviewed. Our aim was to assess the role of several independent clinical variables on the rate of death from
bladder cancer
. Of the 41 patients 6 (15%) died. Univariate statistical analysis identified early involvement of the prostatic urethra and the presence of superficially invasive (stage T1) tumor at initial treatment with BCG as factors having an adverse effect on survival. A multivariate statistical model revealed that patients with early prostatic urethral involvement and the presence of superficially invasive (stage T1) tumor at diagnosis had the highest risk of death from
bladder cancer
. The reason for change in therapy at failure of BCG, stage of the tumor at BCG failure, occurrence of upper tract tumors and early versus delayed radical cystectomy had no impact on survival. The results suggest that not all tumors that recur after BCG are destined to proceed to muscle invasion or
metastases
, and that some patients may be managed safely by repeated endoscopic resection and intravesical therapy with cystectomy delayed until objective progression is evident. Such an approach can yield survival equal to that in patients treated with early cystectomy and may result in longer intervals of bladder preservation in a select subset of patients who fail BCG locally.
...
PMID:Management of local bacillus Calmette-Guerin failures in superficial bladder cancer. 153 37
The majority of patients with
bladder cancer
have superficial disease. Occupational exposure to metabolites of aniline dyes and other aromatic amines has been associated with the development of
bladder cancer
. Latency periods can reach 50 years. Cigarette smoking has also been strongly linked to
bladder cancer
as an etiologic factor. The diagnosis of superficial
bladder cancer
can be elusive because its symptoms mimic those of other common urologic conditions such as urinary tract infection and prostatism. A high index of suspicion is required and a search for
bladder cancer
should be initiated in any adult (especially those over 50 years of age) who exhibits asymptomatic gross or microscopic hematuria, or irritative voiding symptoms. Cystoscopy is required for the screening and diagnosis of superficial
bladder cancer
, and resection of the lesion can be performed cystoscopically as well. Laser ablation of superficial lesions provides a treatment alternative that is less invasive and better tolerated by the patient, but it does not yield a tissue specimen for analysis. Urinary cytology has been invaluable in the screening, diagnosis, and follow-up of superficial
bladder cancer
patients, and now flow cytometry and image analysis techniques can complement it and may eventually supplant it. The key to the management of superficial
bladder cancer
is to identify those patients that may be at risk for recurrence and, more importantly, those who may progress to invasive or
metastatic disease
. Fortunately, most superficial
bladder cancer
remains superficial, and the overall prognosis is good, with 5-year survival rates for superficial disease of approximately 75%. As the natural history of superficial
bladder cancer
has become more evident through extensive research, risk factors such as tumor size, multiplicity, grade, depth of invasion, and condition of the surrounding mucosa have emerged. T1 lesions, those that invade the lamina propria, have a more ominous course than T0 and TA lesions. The mainstay of treatment for superficial disease is transurethral resection of the lesion or lesions. Intravesical therapy has been shown to have a definite effect in eradicating existing disease as well as reducing recurrences, but it has not been shown to prevent invasive disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Superficial bladder cancer. 155 55
Antiblastic chemotherapy of the urological tumors proves to be effective in germ-cell testicular tumor, in
bladder cancer
and in penis cancer, while a real effective anti-cancer therapy for prostatic and renal cell cancer has not found yet. There is not a significant difference between BVP and BEP regimens as first-line treatments of the good risk germ-cell testicular tumors. On the contrary BEP showed a lower toxicity and an higher efficacy in the treatment of the poor risk patients. Considering salvage therapies, PEI regimen proves to be as the most effective, also in the management of patients pretreated with BEP; high dose chemotherapy with autologous bone marrow transplant is currently examined as third-line therapy. In the treatment of
bladder cancer
the most effective drugs are Methotrexate, Adriamycin, Vinblastine and Cyclophosphamide, that, when combined, are sensitively more efficacious. The different chemotherapies achieved elevated percentage of Complete and Partial Responses (CR+PR): however these results are maintained in only 10% of the cases. So far the aim of the last studies is to improve the results both with a modification of posology and of the schedule of administration, and with the employ of growth-factors to reduce toxicity. An appreciable improvement in the treatment of locally advanced penis cancer has been achieved employing VBM regimen as adjuvant therapy, especially for patients with extrinsic lymph-nodal
metastases
, who underwent bilateral inguinal and iliac lymphadenectomy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Chemotherapy of urologic metastases]. 157 May 24
A prospective study was done to evaluate treatment of patients with muscle-infiltrating
bladder cancer
by transurethral resection exclusively. Inclusion criteria for this study were histological confirmation of muscular bladder infiltration, endoscopic radical transurethral resection, disappearance of hardened areas after transurethral resection, and negative biopsies of the depth and periphery of the tumor bed. The study began in April 1981. The average followup in series 1 (April 1981 to December 1986, 59 patients) was 55.4 months. Actually, of the patients 31 (52.5%) are without evidence of recurrence and 28 (47.5%) have recurrent disease. Of the latter patients 11 (18.6%) had invasive bladder recurrence, including 7 (11.9%) who had recurrence at 3 months, which indicated clinical understaging. Three patients (5%) had
metastases
without bladder tumor. The remaining 14 patients (23.7%) had superficial bladder recurrence. The overall survival rate was 83% (49 of 59 patients) and 43 patients (72.8%) still retain the bladder. The present data are confirmed by the results of series 2 (December 1986 to August 1989). Therefore, the data would justify conservative management in a selected group of patients with muscle-infiltrating
bladder cancer
.
...
PMID:Feasibility of transurethral resection for muscle-infiltrating carcinoma of the bladder: prospective study. 159 78
Perineal implantation of
urinary bladder cancer
in a 57-year-old male is reported. The patient had been suffering from incomplete paraplegia and neurogenic bladder for these 29 years because of accidental injury of lumbar spinal cord with episodes of bladder stones two times and right epididymitis three times, and presented urinary leakage from a perineal fistula. The fistula orifice was surrounded by a hard mass lesion. Bilateral swelling of inguinal lymph nodes was present. Fistulogram and voiding cysto-urethrography revealed reflux from posterior urethra to the fistula through right vas and epididymis. Histological diagnosis of resected perineal mass and biopsied left inguinal lymph node was transitional cell carcinoma with predominant metaplasia of squamous cell carcinoma. Tissues obtained by TUR-biopsy of a mass lesion at bladder wall was also histologically diagnosed transitional cell carcinoma with metaplasia of squamous cell carcinoma. The present case indicates implantation of a bladder tumor to perineum by urethero-vasal reflux and
metastases
to inguinal lymphnodes from the perineal lesion.
...
PMID:[The perineal implantation of a bladder tumor through urethro-vasal reflux]. 160 71
Two hundred thirty-six patients with T3
bladder cancer
who survived radical surgery and proved to have P3a, P3b, or P4a tumors were randomized in two phases into three groups: (a) no further treatment (83 patients); (b) postoperative radiotherapy multiple daily fractionation (MDF), using 3 daily fractions of 1.25 Gy each, with 3 hr between fractions, up to a total dose of 37.5 Gy in 12 days (75 patients); and (c) postoperative radiotherapy conventional fractionation (CF), for a total dose of 50 Gy/5 weeks (78 patients). The tolerance of the patients to postoperative radiotherapy was quite acceptable, with equal acute reactions in MDF and CF groups. The 5-year disease-free survival (DFS) rates amounted to 49 and 44% in MDF and CF postoperative radiotherapy groups, respectively, compared to 25% in the cystectomy-alone group. The 5-year local control rates were 87% and 93% for those treated with multiple daily fractionation and conventional fractionation while it was 50% in the surgery-alone group. The therapeutic benefit of postoperative irradiation was consistent for all tumor types, histological grades, and pathological stages for both the disease-free survival and local control. Patients with nodal
metastases
demonstrated lower recurrence rates in the postoperative radiotherapy groups, but this was not associated with improved disease-free survival. Multivariate analysis using the Cox Model confirmed these results. The independent prognostic factors affecting both disease-free survival and local control were the addition of postoperative radiotherapy, the nodal status, the pathological stage, and the tumor grade. Late complications of radiotherapy in the skin, small intestine, rectum, and the anastomotic site of the urinary division were lower with MDF than with conventional fractionation.
...
PMID:Postoperative radiotherapy of carcinoma in bilharzial bladder: improved disease free survival through improving local control. 161 51
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