Morris David S, Weizer Alon Z, Ye Zaojun, Dunn Rodney L, Montie James E, Hollenbeck Brent K
Department of Urology, Taubman Health Care Center, Room 3875, University of Michigan Health System, 1500 East Medical Center Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0330, USA.
Cancer. 2009 Mar 1;115(5):1011-20. doi: 10.1002/cncr.24136.
To the authors' knowledge, the extent to which death from bladder cancer is attributable to tumor biology or physician practice patterns is unknown. For this reason, the relative importance of broadening indications for aggressive therapy has unclear implications.
Patients whose deaths were caused directly by bladder cancer were identified using institutional (n = 126 patients) and administrative (n = 6326 patients) data sources. By using implicit review (clinical data, 2001-2005) and explicit algorithms (Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results [SEER]-Medicare, 1992-2002), the authors estimated the proportion of potentially avoidable deaths from bladder cancer.
After an implicit review of clinical data, 40 of 126 deaths (31.7%) were classified as potentially avoidable. Compared with those patients who were deemed unsalvageable, these patients generally presented with nonmuscle-invasive disease (80% vs 25.6%; P < .001), received multiple courses of intravesical therapy (32.5% vs 1.2%; P < .001), and had a more protracted course from diagnosis to aggressive treatment (median, 23 months vs 2 months; P < .001). An explicit review of claims data indicated that between 31.6% and 46.8% of the 6326 bladder cancer deaths identified in the SEER-Medicare data potentially were avoidable, depending on the survivorship threshold chosen. Patients whose deaths potentially were avoidable more commonly presented with nonmuscle-invasive disease (66.7% vs 24.7%; P < .0001) and lower grade disease (35.1% vs 15.1%; P < .0001).
The greatest inroads into reducing death from bladder cancer likely hinge on earlier detection or improvement of systemic therapies. However, changing physician practice may translate into nontrivial reductions in bladder cancer mortality.
据作者所知,膀胱癌死亡在多大程度上归因于肿瘤生物学或医生的诊疗模式尚不清楚。因此,扩大积极治疗适应证的相对重要性所产生的影响尚不明确。
利用机构数据(n = 126例患者)和行政数据(n = 6326例患者)来源确定直接死于膀胱癌的患者。通过隐式审查(临床数据,2001 - 2005年)和显式算法(监测、流行病学和最终结果[SEER]-医疗保险数据,1992 - 2002年),作者估计了膀胱癌潜在可避免死亡的比例。
对临床数据进行隐式审查后,126例死亡中有40例(31.7%)被归类为潜在可避免死亡。与那些被认为无法挽救的患者相比,这些患者通常表现为非肌层浸润性疾病(80%对25.6%;P <.001),接受了多疗程膀胱内治疗(32.5%对1.2%;P <.001),并且从诊断到积极治疗的病程更长(中位数,23个月对2个月;P <.001)。对索赔数据的显式审查表明,根据所选的生存阈值,在SEER - 医疗保险数据中确定的6326例膀胱癌死亡中,31.6%至46.8%可能是可避免的。潜在可避免死亡的患者更常表现为非肌层浸润性疾病(66.7%对24.7%;P <.0001)和低级别疾病(35.1%对15.1%;P <.0001)。
降低膀胱癌死亡的最大进展可能取决于早期检测或全身治疗的改善。然而,改变医生的诊疗行为可能会使膀胱癌死亡率有显著降低。