27 research outputs found

    Pretherapeutic gamma-glutamyltransferase is an independent prognostic factor for patients with renal cell carcinoma.

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    BACKGROUND: Gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) regulates apoptotic balance and promotes cancer progression and invasion. Higher pretherapeutic GGT serum levels have been associated with worse outcomes in various malignancies, but there are no data for renal cell carcinoma (RCC). METHODS: Pretherapeutic GGT serum levels and clinicopathological parameters were retrospectively evaluated in 921 consecutive RCC patients treated with nephrectomy at a single institution between 1998 and 2013. Gamma-glutamyltransferase was analysed as continuous and categorical variable. Associations with RCC-specific survival were assessed with Cox proportional hazards models. Discrimination was measured with the C-index. Decision-curve analysis was used to evaluate the clinical net benefit. The median postoperative follow-up was 45 months. RESULTS: Median pretherapeutic serum GGT level was 25 U l(-1). Gamma-glutamyltransferase levels increased with advancing T (P<0.001), N (P=0.006) and M stages (P<0.001), higher grades (P<0.001), and presence of tumour necrosis (P<0.001). An increase of GGT by 10 U l(-1) was associated with an increase in the risk of death from RCC by 4% (HR 1.04, P<0.001). Based on recursive partitioning-based survival tree analysis, we defined four prognostic categories of GGT: normal low (<17.5 U l(-1)), normal high (17.5 to <34.5 U l(-1)), elevated (34.5 to <181.5 U l(-1)), and highly elevated (⩾181.5 U l(-1)). In multivariable analyses that adjusted for the effect of standard features, both continuously and categorically coded GGT were independent prognostic factors. Adding GGT to a model that included standard features increased the discrimination by 0.9% to 1.8% and improved the clinical net benefit. CONCLUSIONS: Pretherapeutic serum GGT is a novel and independent prognostic factor for patients with RCC. Stratifying patients into prognostic subgroups according to GGT may be used for patient counselling, tailoring surveillance, individualised treatment planning, and clinical trial design

    Associations Between Presenting Symptoms, Clinicopathological Parameters, and Prognosis in a Contemporary Series of Patients With Renal Cell Carcinoma

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    PURPOSE: To evaluate the impact of presenting symptoms on survival in a contemporary series of patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC). MATERIALS AND METHODS: We prospectively recorded data on the presenting symptoms, pathology, and RCC-specific survival of 633 consecutive RCC patients who underwent surgery between 2003 and 2012. RESULTS: Four hundred thirty-three RCCs (68%) were incidental, 111 (18%) were associated with local symptoms, and 89 (14%) were associated with systemic symptoms. Among those with incidental RCC, 317 patients (73%) were completely asymptomatic and 116 patients (27%) presented with symptoms not related to the tumor. During a median follow-up interval of 40 months (interquartile range: 39 to 69 months), 77 patients died from RCC. In univariate analyses, symptom classification was significantly associated with RCC-specific survival (p<0.001). Patients with incidental RCC and unrelated symptoms tended to have worse prognosis than did patients who were completely asymptomatic, although this difference was not statistically significant (p=0.057). The symptom classification was associated with advanced TNM stages (p<0.001) and grade (p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms that presenting symptoms are associated with tumor characteristics and survival. The majority of RCCs are diagnosed incidentally in patients without any symptoms or with symptoms not related to RCC. Patients in the latter group tend to have a worse prognosis than do patients who are completely asymptomatic. With the increasing number of incidentally diagnosed RCCs, substratification of patients with incidental tumors may be prognostically relevant

    Outcomes of minimally invasive simple prostatectomy for benign prostatic hyperplasia: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

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    PURPOSE: (1) To assess the outcomes of minimally invasive simple prostatectomy (MISP) for the treatment of symptomatic benign prostatic hyperplasia in men with large prostates and (2) to compare them with open simple prostatectomy (OSP). METHODS: A systematic review of outcomes of MISP for benign prostatic hyperplasia with meta-analysis was conducted. The article selection process was conducted according to the PRISMA guidelines. RESULTS: Twenty-seven observational studies with 764 patients were analyzed. The mean prostate volume was 113.5 ml (95 % CI 106-121). The mean increase in Qmax was 14.3 ml/s (95 % CI 13.1-15.6), and the mean improvement in IPSS was 17.2 (95 % CI 15.2-19.2). Mean duration of operation was 141 min (95 % CI 124-159), and the mean intraoperative blood loss was 284 ml (95 % CI 243-325). One hundred and four patients (13.6 %) developed a surgical complication. In comparative studies, length of hospital stay (WMD -1.6 days, p = 0.02), length of catheter use (WMD -1.3 days, p = 0.04) and estimated blood loss (WMD -187 ml, p = 0.015) were significantly lower in the MISP group, while the duration of operation was longer than in OSP (WMD 37.8 min, p < 0.0001). There were no differences in improvements in Qmax, IPSS and perioperative complications between both procedures. The small study sizes, publication bias, lack of systematic complication reporting and short follow-up are limitations. CONCLUSIONS: MISP seems an effective and safe treatment option. It provides similar improvements in Qmax and IPSS as OSP. Despite taking longer, it results in less blood loss and shorter hospital stay. Prospective randomized studies comparing OSP, MISP and laser enucleation are needed to define the standard surgical treatment for large prostates

    Urinary expression of genes involved in DNA methylation and histone modification for diagnosis of bladder cancer in patients with asymptomatic microscopic haematuria.

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    The aim of the present study was to identify and test a urine marker panel of genes involved in DNA methylation and histone modification for the detection of urothelial carcinoma of the bladder (UCB). RNA samples obtained from the voided urine of 227 patients with asymptomatic microscopic haematuria (AMH) were analysed. Gene array analysis was performed on 18 randomly selected cDNA samples, which revealed that histone deacetylase 9 (HDAC9), HDAC3, tRNA (cytosine-5-)-methyltransferase1 and DNA methyltransferase 1 were differentially expressed between patients with UCB and control subjects. Subsequently, reverse transcription-quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis was employed to test the performance of the identified four-gene panel on the remaining 209 cDNA samples. In this targeted discovery cohort, all four genes were significantly associated with UCB on univariable analyses [each odds ratio (OR) >2, P<0.05], but only HDAC3 was significant following multivariable analysis (OR=2.8, P=0.011). The addition of HDAC3 to a base risk factor model improved its accuracy by 1.4%. These data suggest that urinary HDAC3 is associated with the presence of UCB in patients with AMH; however, HDAC3 improved the accuracy of the established risk factors only to a marginal extent

    Comparison of the prognostic value of pretreatment measurements of systemic inflammatory response in patients undergoing curative resection of clear cell renal cell carcinoma.

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    PURPOSE: Pretreatment measurements of systemic inflammatory response, including the Glasgow prognostic score (GPS), the neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR), the monocyte-to-lymphocyte ratio (MLR), the platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio (PLR) and the prognostic nutritional index (PNI) have been recognized as prognostic factors in clear cell renal cell carcinoma (CCRCC), but there is at present no study that compared these markers. METHODS: We evaluated the pretreatment GPS, NLR, MLR, PLR and PNI in 430 patients, who underwent surgery for clinically localized CCRCC (pT1-3N0M0). Associations with disease-free survival were assessed with Cox models. Discrimination was measured with the C-index, and a decision curve analysis was used to evaluate the clinical net benefit. RESULTS: On multivariable analyses, all measures of systemic inflammatory response were significant prognostic factors. The increase in discrimination compared with the stage, size, grade and necrosis (SSIGN) score alone was 5.8 % for the GPS, 1.1-1.4 % for the NLR, 2.9-3.4 % for the MLR, 2.0-3.3 % for the PLR and 1.4-3.0 % for the PNI. On the simultaneous multivariable analysis of all candidate measures, the final multivariable model contained the SSIGN score (HR 1.40, P < 0.001), the GPS (HR 2.32, P < 0.001) and the MLR (HR 5.78, P = 0.003) as significant variables. Adding both the GPS and the MLR increased the discrimination of the SSIGN score by 6.2 % and improved the clinical net benefit. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with clinically localized CCRCC, the GPS and the MLR appear to be the most relevant prognostic measures of systemic inflammatory response. They may be used as an adjunct for patient counseling, tailoring management and clinical trial design

    Histopathology and prognosis of de novo bladder tumors following solid organ transplantation.

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    BACKGROUND: Patients following solid organ transplantation have an increased risk of developing de novo bladder tumors, but their biology is poorly characterized. METHODS: We studied 1743 patients who underwent a transurethral resection of a newly diagnosed bladder tumor at a single institution. The histopathology, treatment, recurrence-free survival and overall survival were evaluated and compared between transplant and non-transplant patients. RESULTS: We identified 74 transplant patients who developed a de novo bladder tumor after a median post-transplantation interval of 62 months. The tumor was malignant in 29 patients (39 %). The most common benign lesion was nephrogenic adenoma (84 %), which neither coexisted with nor developed into malignant tumors during follow-up. Compared with non-transplant patients (n = 1669), transplant patients were significantly younger (median 55 vs 69 years, P < 0.001) and had a 9.0-fold higher odds of benign tumors (P < 0.001), while there were no differences in pathology among patients with urothelial carcinoma of the bladder (UCB). In a multivariable analysis for non-muscle-invasive UCB that was adjusted for the risk group, patients with a transplant had a 1.8-fold increased risk of recurrence (P = 0.048). Four of five transplant patients did not respond to Bacillus Calmette-Guérin instillations. There were no differences in overall survival after radical cystectomy (P = 0.87). CONCLUSIONS: The majority of bladder tumors in transplant patients are benign, and they neither coexist with nor develop into malignant tumors. Transplant patients with non-muscle-invasive UCB show an increased risk of disease recurrence, while those treated with radical cystectomy have similar outcomes to patients without a transplant

    The preoperative prognostic nutritional index is an independent predictor of survival in patients with renal cell carcinoma.

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    OBJECTIVE: Accurate postoperative stratification of patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC) in distinct prognostic groups is essential for tailoring follow-up, medical therapy, and inclusion in clinical trials. Increasing evidence suggests that Onodera׳s prognostic nutritional index (PNI) is a stage- and grade-independent predictor of poor outcomes in patients with cancer, but there are no data in RCC. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We reviewed medical records of 1,344 patients with RCC who underwent radical or partial nephrectomy at the Medical University of Vienna and the University of California-Los Angeles between 1991 and 2012. Associations with cancer-specific survival were assessed with univariable and multivariable Cox proportional hazards models. Discrimination was measured with the C-index. RESULTS: The median postoperative follow-up was 40 months. An increase of PNI by 1 unit was associated with a decrease in the risk of death from RCC by 7% (hazard ratio = 0.93, P<0.001). In multivariable analyses, the PNI was an independent prognostic factor (P<0.001). Adding the PNI improved the discrimination of a base model by 0.4%. CONCLUSIONS: The PNI is an independent prognostic factor in patients with RCC. Its use increases the accuracy of established prognostic factors. PNI may be a meaningful adjunct for tailoring surveillance, medical therapy, and clinical trial design

    The T309G Murine Double Minute 2 Gene Polymorphism Is an Independent Prognostic Factor for Patients with Renal Cell Carcinoma.

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    The purpose of this study was to evaluate the association of the T309G MDM2 gene polymorphism with renal cell carcinoma (RCC) risk, pathology, and cancer-specific survival (CSS). T309G MDM2 was genotyped in 449 Caucasians, including 240 with RCC and 209 cancer-free controls. The T309G MDM2 genotype was TT in 174 (38.8%), GT in 214 (47.7%), and GG in 61 (13.6%) subjects, without any significant differences between cases and controls on both univariable (p=0.58) and multivariable logistic regression (each p>0.25). Furthermore, T309G MDM2 was not linked with T stage (p=0.75), N stage (p=0.37), M stage (p=0.94), grade (p=0.21), and subtype (p=0.55). There was, however, a statistically significant association of T309G MDM2 with CSS (p=0.022): patients with TT had significantly worse survival than GG/GT (p=0.009), while those with GT and GG had similar outcomes (p=0.92). The 5-year survival rate for patients with TT, GT, and GG was 69.5%, 84.5%, and 89.7%, respectively. On the multivariable analysis, T309G was identified as an independent prognostic factor. The T309G MDM2 polymorphism is an independent prognostic factor for patients with RCC, with the TT genotype being associated with worse prognosis. In this study, there were no significant associations with RCC risk and pathology

    Development of a Preoperative Nomogram Incorporating Biomarkers of Systemic Inflammatory Response to Predict Nonorgan-confined Urothelial Carcinoma of the Bladder at Radical Cystectomy.

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    To develop a preoperative multivariable decision-making tool to predict nonorgan-confined urothelial carcinoma of the bladder (NOC-UCB) using standard clinical and pathological factors as well as biomarkers of systemic inflammatory response. We retrospectively analyzed a prospectively maintained single-institutional database comprising 310 patients with clinically N0 M0 UCB who underwent radical cystectomy (RC) with pelvic lymph node dissection without neoadjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy (NAC). NOC-UCB was defined as pT3-4/Nany or pTany/N + disease. A predictive nomogram was built based on significant variables in a bootstrap-corrected multivariable logistic regression model. The accuracy was measured by the area under the curve. Decision-curve analysis was used to evaluate the clinical net benefit. NOC-UCB was found in 147 (47%) of the 310 patients. On multivariable analysis, T stage at transurethral resection of the bladder, lymphovascular invasion, abnormal imaging, and Glasgow prognostic score (GPS) were all independent predictors of NOC-UCB and formed the basis of the nomogram. By adding the GPS, the accuracy of the nomogram improved by 4.7% to 81.7%. The decision curve analysis showed a net benefit of this model compared with the Green model and the strategies of treating all patients or no patient with NAC. Limitations include the retrospective design and the lack of a validation cohort. NOC-UCB at radical cystectomy can be accurately predicted. The accuracy of preoperative models can be improved by adding biomarkers of systemic inflammatory response, such as the GPS. The use of this nomogram may help physicians to accurately identify patients with NOC-UCB who may benefit from NAC
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