Kompier Lucie C, van der Aa Madelon N M, Lurkin Irene, Vermeij Marcel, Kirkels Wim J, Bangma Chris H, van der Kwast Theodorus H, Zwarthoff Ellen C
Department of Pathology, Josephine Nefkens Institute, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
J Pathol. 2009 May;218(1):104-12. doi: 10.1002/path.2507.
Non-muscle invasive bladder cancers (NMI-BCs) represent 75% of bladder cancers upon presentation. After removal of the primary tumour by transurethral resection, multiple recurrences continue to develop in 70% of patients. Consequently, prolonged and costly surveillance by cystoscopy is required. Mutations in the FGFR3 oncogene are common in NMI-BCs and are associated with a lower chance of progression to muscle-invasive disease. Here we analysed the consistency of FGFR3 mutations in primary and recurrent tumours. This knowledge is of crucial importance if FGFR3 mutation analysis on urinary cells is to be used as an alternative for cystoscopical surveillance. To this end, we monitored the disease process and FGFR3 mutation status of primary and recurrent tumours in 118 patients with NMI-BC. During median follow-up of 8.8 years, these patients underwent 2133 cystoscopies and 80 patients developed 414 recurrences. FGFR3 mutations were equally prevalent in primary and recurrent tumours (63%). Patients can have different types of FGFR3 mutations in different tumours. Recurrence risk was not significantly different for patients with a mutant or wild-type primary tumour. Recurrence rates varied widely between patients but were constant for a patient and were unrelated to FGFR3 status. In the mutant patient group, in contrast to the wild-type group, recurrences continued to develop after 10 years. In 81% of the recurrences of patients with a mutant primary tumour, a mutation was found. Moreover, recurrences in this patient group were of lower stage and grade than those of patients with a wild-type primary tumour (p < 0.001). These results suggest that surveillance by FGFR3 mutation analysis on voided urine in combination with a reduced cystoscopy frequency of patients presenting with an FGFR3 mutant tumour is worth investigating.
非肌肉浸润性膀胱癌(NMI-BCs)占膀胱癌初诊病例的75%。经尿道切除原发性肿瘤后,70%的患者会持续出现多次复发。因此,需要通过膀胱镜进行长期且昂贵的监测。FGFR3癌基因的突变在NMI-BCs中很常见,并且与进展为肌肉浸润性疾病的可能性较低相关。在此,我们分析了原发性和复发性肿瘤中FGFR3突变的一致性。如果尿液细胞的FGFR3突变分析要用作膀胱镜监测的替代方法,那么这一知识至关重要。为此,我们监测了118例NMI-BC患者原发性和复发性肿瘤的病程及FGFR3突变状态。在中位随访8.8年期间,这些患者接受了2133次膀胱镜检查,80例患者出现了414次复发。FGFR3突变在原发性和复发性肿瘤中同样普遍(63%)。患者在不同肿瘤中可能有不同类型的FGFR3突变。原发性肿瘤为突变型或野生型的患者,其复发风险无显著差异。患者之间的复发率差异很大,但对一名患者来说是恒定的,且与FGFR3状态无关。与野生型组相比,突变型患者组在10年后仍持续出现复发。在原发性肿瘤为突变型的患者的81%的复发中,发现了突变。此外,该患者组的复发分期和分级低于原发性肿瘤为野生型的患者(p<0.001)。这些结果表明,对FGFR3突变型肿瘤患者,通过对排尿进行FGFR3突变分析并结合降低膀胱镜检查频率来进行监测值得研究。