Long-term oncologic outcomes and complications of robot-assisted radical cystectomy for the treatment of urothelial carcinoma of the bladder.

Publication Title

Urologic oncology

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

10-22-2024

Keywords

california; santa monica; jwci; sjci

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: To report the long-term outcomes of robot-assisted radical cystectomy (RARC) for the treatment of muscle invasive and high-risk non-muscle invasive bladder cancer.

METHODS: We reviewed a single tertiary center database of RARC from 2004 to 2020. Concomitant extended pelvic lymph node dissection and extracorporeal urinary diversion were performed. Cox regression analysis and the Kaplan-Meier method were used to identify factors associated with and report time-to-event estimations of recurrence-free survival and overall survival. Clavien-Dindo complications were identified, categorized, and substratified by time from surgery within 90-days and between 90-days and >5-years postoperatively.

RESULTS: A total of 510 patients with median follow-up of 57.1 months (IQR 21.8-103.6) were included. Continent diversion was performed in 259 (51%) patients. Of the 340 (67%) ≥cT2 patients, 153 (45%) received cisplatin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Recurrence was identified in 157 (31%) patients, and 118 (23%) died from bladder cancer. The overall complication rate was 52% with 267 (41%) major grade ≥ III events. Infectious (25%) and genitourinary (22%) complications were the most common irrespective of the time interval beyond 90-days. The risk of recurrence or death were increased by extravesical disease (HR 1.91 and 1.97, respectively) and lymph node positivity (HR 4.58 and 2.42, respectively) in multivariable analysis (all, P < 0.001). The estimated 5-, and 10-year recurrence-free and overall survival rates were 69% and 64% and 61% and 44%, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS: RARC is a durable treatment that optimizes the probability of cure for patients requiring extirpation for bladder cancer. Targeting the modifiable complications of radical surgery may further improve the risk/benefit ratio of RARC.

Area of Special Interest

Cancer

Specialty/Research Institute

Oncology

Specialty/Research Institute

Surgery

Specialty/Research Institute

Urology

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