AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how factors related to patients, surgery, and tumors affect the presence of detrusor muscle (DM) in bladder cancer surgeries and its influence on patient outcomes.
  • Out of 3,237 TUR-BTs analyzed, DM was found in 67.6% of cases, with surgery duration, tumor type, and location being significant predictors for DM absence.
  • The absence of DM, particularly in high-grade bladder cancer, is linked to a lower chance of recurrence-free survival, highlighting the need for thorough and skilled surgical techniques.

Article Abstract

Introduction: As a high-quality TUR-BT is important to ensure adequate treatment for bladder cancer patients, the aim of the current study is to investigate the impact of patient-related, surgical and tumor-specific parameters on detrusor muscle (DM) absence (primary objective) and to assess the impact of DM on the prognosis after a TUR-BT (secondary objective).

Patients And Methods: Transurethral resection of bladder tumors (TUR-BTs) between 2009 and 2021 were retrospectively screened (n = 3237). We included 2058 cases (1472 patients) for the primary and 472 patients for secondary objective. Clinicopathological variables including tumor size, localization, multifocality, configuration, operation time and skill-level of the urologist were assessed. We analyzed predictors for missing DM and prognostic factors for recurrence-free survival (RFS) for the complete cohort and subgroups.

Results: DM was present in 67.6% (n = 1371/2058). Surgery duration (continuous, minutes) was an independent predictor for absence of DM in the complete cohort (OR:0.98, r:0.012, 95%CI:0.98-0.99, p = 0.001). Other significant risk factors for missing DM were papillary tumors (OR:1.99, r:0.251, 95%CI:1.22-3.27, p = 0.006) in the complete cohort and bladder-roof and posterior-bladder-wall localization for re-resections. Absence of DM in high-grade BC correlated with reduced RFS (HR:1.96, 95%CI:1.0-3.79, p = 0.045).

Conclusion: Sufficient time for a TUR-BT is mandatory to assure DM in the TUR-BT specimen. Also, cases with more difficult locations of bladder tumors should be performed with utmost surgical diligence and endourological training should incorporate how to perform such operations. Of note, DM correlates with improved oncological prognosis in high-grade BC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10249185PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12894-023-01278-7DOI Listing

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