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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Cigarette Smoking Status at Diagnosis and Recurrence in Intermediate-risk Nonemuscle-invasive Bladder Carcinoma

Rosalinda AllegroAlessandra Di LalloGiuseppe MorgiaVincenzo SerrettaGiuseppe CarrieriVincenzo Altieri

subject

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyMultivariate analysisTime Factorsintravesical chemotherapy non-muscle invasive bladder cancerUrologymedicine.medical_treatmentcigarette smokingKaplan-Meier EstimateCystectomyGastroenterologyDisease-Free SurvivalSettore MED/24 - UrologiaCystectomyCigarette smokingRisk FactorsMulticenter trialInternal medicinemedicineCarcinomaHumansAgedEpirubicinProportional Hazards ModelsAged 80 and overAntibiotics AntineoplasticProportional hazards modelbusiness.industryCarcinomaSmokingMiddle AgedFormer Smokermedicine.diseaseintermediate-risk tumorrecurrence.Combined Modality TherapySurgeryUrinary Bladder NeoplasmsMultivariate AnalysisFemaleNeoplasm Recurrence LocalbusinessEpirubicinmedicine.drug

description

Objective To study the effect of smoking status at diagnosis on recurrence in intermediate-risk non–muscle-invasive bladder carcinoma treated by transurethral resection (TUR) of the bladder and early intravesical chemotherapy. Methods Tumor characteristics and smoking status were recorded in 395 patients entered in a randomized multicenter trial comparing 2 different schedules of early intravesical chemotherapy. All patients received intravesical epirubicin (80 mg/50 mL) within 6 hours after TUR, followed by 5 more weekly instillations with (arm B) or without (arm A) monthly instillations for 1 year. Smoking habit was investigated at diagnosis through a structured questionnaire. Multivariate statistical analysis was performed to study the recurrence-free survival (RFS) and the recurrence-free rate (RFR) in relation to smoking status. Results Ninety-seven (24.6%) patients never smoked and 298 (75.4%) were smokers. At a median follow-up of 48 months, 117 patients (29.6%) recurred, 63 in arm A and 54 in arm B (P = .43). Ten patients (2.5%) progressed. The 3-year RFS, RFR, and median time to first recurrence of smokers and patients who never smoked were 64.0% and 71.3% (P = .08), 69.1% and 74.2% (P = .16), and 13.6 and 14.2 months (P = .27), respectively. The multivariate analysis identified previous history (P = .01) and smoking status (P = .04) as the main prognostic factors for recurrence in these patients. No difference in recurrence risk at 3 years was detected between current and former smokers. Conclusion In intermediate-risk non–muscle-invasive bladder carcinoma treated by early intravesical chemotherapy, smoking status influences significantly the 3-year RFS. No difference was detected between current and former smokers.

10.1016/j.urology.2012.09.040http://hdl.handle.net/10447/70143