Mukesh Mukesh, Cook Natalie, Hollingdale Abigail E, Ainsworth Nicola L, Russell Simon G
Department of Oncology, Addenbrooke's Hospital NHS Trust, Cambridge, UK.
BJU Int. 2009 Mar;103(6):747-52. doi: 10.1111/j.1464-410X.2008.08241.x. Epub 2008 Dec 5.
To report the clinical experience and management of patients with small cell carcinoma (SCC) of the bladder, treated in the Anglia Cancer network from 1992 to 2007, and to review published studies, as SCC is a rare condition, accounting for <1% of all bladder tumours, and there is no established treatment strategy for managing these patients.
We analysed retrospectively data from all patients diagnosed with SCC of the urinary bladder between 1992 and 2007, with an emphasis on stage, treatment and overall survival.
Twenty patients were identified with primary bladder SCC (male: female ratio 3:1; mean age 68 years; mean follow-up 15.8 months). Nine patients (45%) had extensive-stage disease at diagnosis. Four patients received best supportive care, three had a radical cystectomy, one radical radiotherapy and six sequential chemo-radiotherapy. In all, 13 patients were treated with chemotherapy, with six receiving cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin and vincristine, three receiving carboplatin and etoposide, and the remainder receiving alternative platinum-based regimens. For 12 patients with assessable disease, six had a complete response, three a partial response and three had progressive disease after chemotherapy. No patient received prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI). At the time of analysis, 14 (70%) patients had died, with one (5%) developing brain metastasis. The median survival was 33 months for patients receiving chemotherapy, vs 3 months with no chemotherapy.
SCC of the bladder tends to occur in an older population, more commonly in men. It is an aggressive tumour with a propensity for early metastasis. The response rate to chemotherapy is high but the overall prognosis is poor. Brain secondaries are less common than for SCC of the lung and currently the role of PCI is unclear. As there is no standard of care for these patients, they are treated according to local protocols. Further efforts should be made to develop more effective treatments and the role of PCI should be assessed in the setting of a clinical trial, in conjunction with other extrapulmonary SCCs.
报告1992年至2007年在东安格利亚癌症网络接受治疗的膀胱小细胞癌(SCC)患者的临床经验及管理情况,并回顾已发表的研究,因为SCC是一种罕见疾病,占所有膀胱肿瘤的比例不到1%,且尚无既定的治疗策略来管理这些患者。
我们回顾性分析了1992年至2007年间所有诊断为膀胱SCC患者的数据,重点关注分期、治疗及总生存期。
共确定20例原发性膀胱SCC患者(男女比例为3:1;平均年龄68岁;平均随访15.8个月)。9例患者(45%)诊断时为广泛期疾病。4例患者接受了最佳支持治疗,3例接受了根治性膀胱切除术,1例接受了根治性放疗,6例接受了序贯放化疗。共有13例患者接受了化疗,其中6例接受环磷酰胺、多柔比星和长春新碱治疗,3例接受卡铂和依托泊苷治疗,其余患者接受其他基于铂类的方案。对于12例可评估疾病的患者,6例完全缓解,3例部分缓解,3例化疗后疾病进展。无患者接受预防性颅脑照射(PCI)。在分析时,14例(70%)患者死亡,1例(5%)发生脑转移。接受化疗患者的中位生存期为33个月,未接受化疗患者为3个月。
膀胱SCC往往发生于老年人群,男性更为常见。它是一种侵袭性肿瘤,易于早期转移。化疗反应率较高,但总体预后较差。脑转移瘤比肺SCC少见,目前PCI的作用尚不清楚。由于这些患者尚无标准治疗方案,他们按照当地方案进行治疗。应进一步努力开发更有效的治疗方法,并在临床试验中结合其他肺外SCC评估PCI的作用。