The impact of method of distal ureter management during radical nephroureterectomy on tumour recurrence

Journal of the Canadian Urological Association - Tập 8 Số 11-12 - Trang 845
Anil Kapoor1, Shawn Dason1, Christopher B. Allard1, Bobby Shayegan1, Louis Lacombe2, Ricardo Rendon3, Niels-Erik Jacobsen4, Adrian Fairey4, Jonathan I. Izawa5, Peter C. Black6, Simon Tanguay7, Joseph L. Chin5, Alan So6, Jean‐Baptiste Lattouf8, David Bell3, Fred Saad8, Darrell Drachenberg9, Ilias Cagiannos10, Yves Fradet2, Abdulaziz Alamri11, Wassim Kassouf7
1McMaster Universty, Hamilton, ON;
2Laval University, Quebec, QC
3Dalhousie University, Halifax NS
4University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB
5University of Western Ontario, London, ON
6University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC
7McGill University, Montreal, QC
8University of Montreal, Montreal, QC
9University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB;
10University of Ottawa, Ottawa ON
11King Khalid University, Abha, Saudi Arabia

Tóm tắt

Introduction: Radical nephroureterectomy for upper tract urothelial carcinoma (UTUC) must include some form of distal ureter management to avoid high rates of tumour recurrence. It is uncertain which distal ureter management technique has the best oncologic outcomes. To determine which distal ureter management technique resulted in the lowest tumour recurrence rate, we analyzed a multiinstitutional Canadian radical nephroureterectomy database.Methods: We retrospectively analyzed patients who underwent radical nephroureterectomy with distal ureter management for UTUC between January 1990 and June 2010 at 10 Canadian tertiary hospitals. Distal ureter management approaches were divided into 3 categories: (1) extravesical tenting for ureteric excision without cystotomy (EXTRAVESICAL); (2) open cystotomy with intravesical bladder cuff excision (INTRAVESICAL); and (3) extravesical excision with endoscopic management of ureteric orifice (ENDOSCOPIC). Data available for each patient included demographic details, distal ureter management approach, pathology and operative details, as well as the presence and location of local or distant recurrence. Clinical outcomes included overall recurrence-free survival and intravesical recurrence-free survival. Survival analysis was performed with the Kaplan-Meier method. Multivariable Cox regression analysis was also performed.Results: A total of 820 patients underwent radical nephroureterectomy with a specified distal ureter management approach at 10 Canadian academic institutions. The mean patient age was 69.6 years and the median follow-up was 24.6 months. Of the 820 patients, 406 (49.5%) underwent INTRAVESICAL, 316 (38.5%) underwent EXTRAVESICAL, and 98 (11.9%) underwent ENDOSOPIC distal ureter management. Groups differed significantly in their proportion of females, proportion of laparoscopic cases, presence of carcinoma in situ and pathological tumour stage (p < 0.05). Recurrence-free survival at 5 years was 46.3%, 35.6%, and 30.1% for INTRAVESICAL, EXTRAVESICAL and ENDOSCOPIC, respectively (p < 0.05). Multivariable Cox regression analysis confirmed that INTRAVESICAL resulted in a lower hazard of recurrence compared to EXTRAVESICAL and ENDOSCOPIC. When looking only at intravesical recurrence-free survival (iRFS), a similar trend held up with INTRAVESICAL having the highest iRFS, followed by ENDOSCOPIC and then EXTRAVESICAL management (p < 0.05). At last follow-up, 406 (49.5%) patients were alive and free of disease.Conclusion: Open intravesical excision of the distal ureter (INTRAVESICAL) during radical nephroureterectomy was associated with improved overall and intravesical recurrence-free survival compared with extravesical and endoscopic approaches. These findings suggest that INTRAVESICAL should be considered the gold standard oncologic approach to distal ureter management during radical nephroureterectomy. Limitations of this study include its retrospective design, heterogeneous cohort, and limited follow-up.

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