Cancers (May 2021)

Intravesical Bacillus Calmette–Guérin Treatment for T1 High-Grade Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer with Divergent Differentiation or Variant Morphologies

  • Makito Miyake,
  • Nobutaka Nishimura,
  • Kota Iida,
  • Tomomi Fujii,
  • Ryoma Nishikawa,
  • Shogo Teraoka,
  • Atsushi Takenaka,
  • Hiroshi Kikuchi,
  • Takashige Abe,
  • Nobuo Shinohara,
  • Eijiro Okajima,
  • Takuto Shimizu,
  • Shunta Hori,
  • Norihiko Tsuchiya,
  • Takuya Owari,
  • Yasukiyo Murakami,
  • Rikiya Taoka,
  • Takashi Kobayashi,
  • Takahiro Kojima,
  • Naotaka Nishiyama,
  • Hiroshi Kitamura,
  • Hiroyuki Nishiyama,
  • Kiyohide Fujimoto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13112615
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. 2615

Abstract

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The 2016 World Health Organization classification newly described infiltrating urothelial carcinoma (UC) with divergent differentiation (DD) or variant morphologies (VMs). Data comparing oncological outcomes after bladder-preservation therapy using intravesical Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) treatment among T1 bladder pure UC (pUC), UC with DD (UC-DD), and UC with VMs (UC-VM) are limited. We evaluated 1490 patients with T1 high-grade bladder UC who received intravesical BCG during 2000–2019. They were classified into three groups: 93.6% with pUC, 4.4% with UC-DD, and 2.0% with UC-VM. Recurrence-free, progression-free, and cancer-specific survival following intravesical BCG were compared among the groups using multivariate Cox regression analysis, also used to estimate inverse probability of treatment weighting-adjusted hazard ratio and 95% confidence interval for the outcomes. Glandular differentiation and micropapillary variant were the most common forms in the UC-DD and UC-VM groups, respectively. Of 1490 patients, 31% and 13% experienced recurrence and progression, respectively, and 5.0% died of bladder cancer. Survival analyses revealed the impact of concomitant VMs was significant for cancer-specific survival, but not recurrence-free and progression-free survival compared with that of pUC. Our analysis clearly demonstrated that concomitant VMs were associated with aggressive behavior in contrast to concomitant DD in patients treated with intravesical BCG.

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