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The Journal of Urology | 1983

Superficial Bladder Cancer: Progression and Recurrence

Niall M. Heney; Susan W. Ahmed; Malachi J. Flanagan; William J. Frable; Michael P. Corder; Mark D. Hafermann; Ileana R. Hawkins; George R. Prout; Gilbert H. Friedell; David A. Culp; Stefan A. Loening; Kenneth B. Cummings; S.J. Cutler; M.J. Flanagan; Warren W. Koontz; Harper M. Pearse; C. Merrin; Zev Wajsman; Clair E. Cox; Mark S. Soloway

The tumors in 249 patients presenting initially with stages Ta and T1 bladder cancer were analyzed for tumor progression and recurrence. Only transurethral resection and/or fulguration was used before the first recurrence. Patients who received intravesical chemotherapy after the first tumor recurrence were excluded from an analysis of progression. Progression according to stages Ta and T1, and grades I, II and III was 4, 30, 2, 11 and 45 per cent, respectively. All differences were statistically significant. Progression also correlated with nontumor dysplasia and size. High tumor grade, lamina propria invasion, atypia elsewhere in the bladder, positive urinary cytology, tumor multiplicity and large tumors were associated with shorter intervals free of disease.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1995

Advanced prostate cancer: The results of a randomized comparative trial of high dose irradiation boosting with conformal protons compared with conventional dose irradiation using photons alone☆

William U. Shipley; Lynn Verhey; John E. Munzenrider; Herman D. Suit; Marcia Urie; Patricia McManus; Robert H. Young; Jenot W. Shipley; Anthony L. Zietman; Peter J. Biggs; Niall M. Heney; Michael Goitein

PURPOSE Following a thorough Phase I/II study, we evaluated by a Phase III trial high versus conventional dose external beam irradiation as mono-therapy for patients with Stage T3-T4 prostate cancer. Patient outcome following standard dose radiotherapy or following a 12.5% increase in total dose to 75.6 Cobalt Gray Equivalent (CGE) using a conformal perineal proton boost was compared for local tumor control, disease-free survival, and overall survival. METHODS AND MATERIALS Stage T3-T4, Nx, N0-2, M0 patients received 50.4 Gy by four-field photons and were randomized to receive either an additional 25.2 CGE by conformal protons (arm 1--the high dose arm, 103 patients, total dose 75.6 CGE) or an additional 16.8 Gy by photons (arm 2--the conventional dose arm, 99 patients, total dose 67.2 Gy). Actuarial overall survival (OS), disease-specific survival (DSS), total recurrence-free survival (TRFS), (clinically free, prostate specific antigen (PSA) less than 4ng/ml and a negative prostate rebiopsy, done in 38 patients without evidence of disease) and local control (digital rectal exam and rebiopsy negative) were evaluated. RESULTS The protocol completion rate was 90% for arm 1 and 97% for arm 2. With a median follow-up of 61 months (range 3 to 139 months) 135 patients are alive and 67 have died, 20 from causes other than prostate cancer. We found no significant differences in OS, DSS, TRFS or local control between the two arms. Among those completing randomized treatment (93 in arm 1 and 96 in arm 2), the local control at 5 and 8 years for arm 1 is 92% and 77%, respectively and is 80% and 60%, respectively for arm 2 (p = .089) and there are no significant differences in OS, DSS, and TRFS. The local control for the 57 patients with poorly differentiated (Gleason 4 or 5 of 5) tumors at 5 and 8 years for arm 1 is 94% and 84% and is 64% and 19% on arm 2 (p = 0.0014). In patients whose digital rectal exam had normalized following treatment and underwent prostate rebiopsy there was a lower positive rebiopsy rate for arm 1 versus arm 2 patients (28 vs. 45%) and also for those with well and moderately differentiated tumors versus poorly differentiated tumors (32 and 50%). These differences were not statistically significant. Grade 1 and 2 rectal bleeding is higher (32 vs. 12%, p = 0.002) as may be urethral stricture (19 vs. 8%, p = 0.07) in the arm 1 versus arm 2. CONCLUSIONS An increase in prostate tumor dose by external beam of 12.5% to 75.6 CGE by a conformal proton boost compared to a conventional dose of 67.2 Gy by a photon boost significantly improved local control only in patients with poorly differentiated tumors. It has increased late radiation sequelae, and as yet, has not increased overall survival, disease-specific survival, or total recurrence-free survival in any subgroup. These results have led us to test by a subsequent Phase III trial the potential beneficial effect on local control and disease-specific survival of a 12.5% increase in total dose relative to conventional dose in patients with T1, T2a, and T2b tumors.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998

Phase III trial of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in patients with invasive bladder cancer treated with selective bladder preservation by combined radiation therapy and chemotherapy: initial results of Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 89-03.

William U. Shipley; K A Winter; Donald S. Kaufman; William R. Lee; Niall M. Heney; W R Tester; B J Donnelly; P Venner; C A Perez; K J Murray; R S Doggett; L D True

PURPOSETo assess the efficacy of neoadjuvant methotrexate, cisplatin, and vinblastine (MCV) chemotherapy in patients with muscle-invading bladder cancer treated with selective bladder preservation.PATIENTS AND METHODSOne hundred twenty-three eligible patients with tumor, node, metastasis system clinical stage T2 to T4aNXMO bladder cancer were randomized to receive (arm 1, n=61 ) two cycles of MCV before 39.6-Gy pelvic irradiation with concurrent cisplatin 100 mg/m2 for two courses 3 weeks apart. Patients assigned to arm 2 (n=62) did not receive MCV before concurrent cisplatin and radiation therapy. Tumor response was scored as a clinical complete response (CR) when the cystoscopic tumor-site biopsy and urine cytology results were negative. The CR patients were treated with an additional 25.2 Gy to a total of 64.8 Gy and one additional dose of cisplatin. Those with less than a CR underwent cystectomy. The median follow-up of all patients who survived is 60 months.RESULTSSeventy-four percent of the patients...


Urology | 2002

Selective bladder preservation by combined modality protocol treatment: long-term outcomes of 190 patients with invasive bladder cancer

William U. Shipley; Donald S. Kaufman; Elizabeth Zehr; Niall M. Heney; S.C. Lane; Harjot Thakral; Alex F. Althausen; Anthony L. Zietman

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the outcomes of patients with muscle-invasive Stage T2-4a bladder carcinoma managed by transurethral surgery and concurrent chemoradiation. METHODS A total of 190 patients were treated on institutional prospective protocols using concurrent cisplatin-containing chemotherapy and radiotherapy after rigorous transurethral resection of the bladder tumor. Patients were re-evaluated by repeated biopsy and urine cytologic analysis after 40 Gy, with the initial tumor response guiding subsequent therapy. One hundred twenty-one patients with a complete response by cytologic and histologic examination and those medically unfit for cystectomy received boost chemoradiation to 64 to 65 Gy. Those patients without a complete response were advised to undergo radical cystectomy. A total of 66 patients (35%) ultimately underwent radical cystectomy; 41 for less than a complete response and an additional 25 for recurrent invasive tumors. The median follow-up was 6.7 years for all surviving patients. RESULTS The 5 and 10-year actuarial overall survival rate was 54% and 36%, respectively (Stage T2, 62% and 41%; Stage T3-T4a, 47% and 31%, respectively). The 5 and 10-year disease-specific survival rate was 63% and 59% (Stage T2, 74% and 66%; Stage T3-T4a, 53% and 52%), respectively. The 5 and 10-year disease-specific survival rate for patients with an intact bladder was 46% and 45% (Stage T2, 57% and 50%; Stage T3-T4a, 35% and 34%), respectively. The pelvic failure rate was 8.4%. No patient required cystectomy because of bladder morbidity. CONCLUSIONS The 10-year overall survival and disease-specific survival rates are comparable with the results reported for contemporary radical cystectomy for patients of similar clinical and pathologic stage. One third of patients treated on protocol with the goal of bladder sparing ultimately required a cystectomy. A trimodality approach with bladder preservation based on the initial tumor response is, therefore, safe, with most long-term survivors retaining functional bladders.


European Urology | 2012

Long-Term Outcomes of Selective Bladder Preservation by Combined-Modality Therapy for Invasive Bladder Cancer: The MGH Experience

Jason A. Efstathiou; Daphna Y. Spiegel; William U. Shipley; Niall M. Heney; Donald S. Kaufman; Andrzej Niemierko; John J. Coen; Rafi Y. Skowronski; Jonathan J. Paly; Francis J. McGovern; Anthony L. Zietman

BACKGROUND Whether organ-conserving treatment by combined-modality therapy (CMT) achieves comparable long-term survival to radical cystectomy (RC) for muscle-invasive bladder cancer (BCa) is largely unknown. OBJECTIVE Report long-term outcomes of patients with muscle-invasive BCa treated by CMT. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS We conducted an analysis of successive prospective protocols at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) treating 348 patients with cT2-4a disease between 1986 and 2006. Median follow-up for surviving patients was 7.7 yr. INTERVENTIONS Patients underwent concurrent cisplatin-based chemotherapy and radiation therapy (RT) after maximal transurethral resection of bladder tumor (TURBT) plus neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy. Repeat biopsy was performed after 40 Gy, with initial tumor response guiding subsequent therapy. Those patients showing complete response (CR) received boost chemotherapy and RT. One hundred two patients (29%) underwent RC-60 for less than CR and 42 for recurrent invasive tumors. MEASUREMENTS Disease-specific survival (DSS) and overall survival (OS) were evaluated using the Kaplan-Meier method. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS Seventy-two percent of patients (78% with stage T2) had CR to induction therapy. Five-, 10-, and 15-yr DSS rates were 64%, 59%, and 57% (T2=74%, 67%, and 63%; T3-4=53%, 49%, and 49%), respectively. Five-, 10-, and 15-yr OS rates were 52%, 35%, and 22% (T2: 61%, 43%, and 28%; T3-4=41%, 27%, and 16%), respectively. Among patients showing CR, 10-yr rates of noninvasive, invasive, pelvic, and distant recurrences were 29%, 16%, 11%, and 32%, respectively. Among patients undergoing visibly complete TURBT, only 22% required cystectomy (vs 42% with incomplete TURBT; log-rank p<0.001). In multivariate analyses, clinical T-stage and CR were significantly associated with improved DSS and OS. Use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy did not improve outcomes. No patient required cystectomy for treatment-related toxicity. CONCLUSIONS CMT achieves a CR and preserves the native bladder in >70% of patients while offering long-term survival rates comparable to contemporary cystectomy series. These results support modern bladder-sparing therapy as a proven alternative for selected patients.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1997

Bladder preservation by combined modality therapy for invasive bladder cancer.

Lisa A. Kachnic; Donald S. Kaufman; Niall M. Heney; Alex F. Althausen; Pamela P. Griffin; Anthony L. Zietman; William U. Shipley

PURPOSE To update the efficacy of a selective multimodality bladder-preserving approach by transurethral resection (TURBT), systemic chemotherapy, and radiation therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS From 1986 through 1993, 106 patients with muscle-invading clinical stage T2 to T4a,Nx,M0 bladder cancer were treated with induction by maximal TURBT and two cycles of chemotherapy (methotrexate, cisplatin, vinblastine [MCV]) followed by 39.6-Gy pelvic irradiation with concomitant cisplatin. Patients with a negative postinduction therapy tumor site biopsy and cytology (a T0 response, 70 patients) plus those with less than a T0 response but medically unfit for cystectomy (six patients), received consolidative chemoradiation to a total of 64.8 Gy. Surgical candidates with less than a T0 response (13 patients) and patients who could not tolerate the chemoradiation (six patients) went to immediate cystectomy. The median follow-up duration is 4.4 years. RESULTS The 5-year actuarial overall survival and disease-specific survival rates of all patients are 52% and 60%, respectively. For clinical stage T2 patients, the actuarial overall survival rate is 63%, and for T3-4, 45%. Thirty-six patients (34%) underwent cystectomy, all with evidence of tumor activity, including 17 with an invasive recurrence. The 5-year overall survival rate with an intact functioning bladder is 43%. Among 76 patients who completed bladder-preserving therapy, the 5-year rate of freedom from an invasive bladder relapse is 79%. No patient required cystectomy for treatment-related bladder morbidity. CONCLUSION Combined modality therapy with TURBT, chemotherapy, radiation, and selection for organ-conservation by response has a 52% overall survival rate. This result is similar to cystectomy-based studies for patients of similar age and clinical stages. The majority of the long-term survivors retain fully functional bladders.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1993

Selective Bladder Preservation by Combination Treatment of Invasive Bladder Cancer

Donald S. Kaufman; William U. Shipley; Pamela P. Griffin; Niall M. Heney; Alex F. Althausen; Jimmy T. Efird

BACKGROUND For patients with invasive bladder cancer the usual recommended treatment is radical cystectomy, although transurethral resection of the tumor, systemic chemotherapy, and radiotherapy are each effective in some patients. We sought to determine whether these treatments in combination might be as effective as radical cystectomy and thus might allow the bladder to be preserved and the cancer cured. METHODS We enrolled 53 consecutive patients with muscle-invading bladder cancer (stages T2 through T4, NXM0) in a trial of transurethral surgery, combination chemotherapy, and irradiation (4000 cGy) with concurrent cisplatin administration. Urologic evaluation of the tumor response directed further therapy: radical cystectomy in the 8 patients who had incomplete responses, additional chemotherapy and radiotherapy (6480 cGy) in the 34 patients who had complete responses or who were unsuited for cystectomy, and alternative care in the 11 patients who could not tolerate either irradiation or chemotherapy. RESULTS After a median follow-up of 48 months, 24 of the 53 patients (45 percent) were alive and free of detectable tumor. In 31 patients (58 percent) the bladder was free of invasive tumor and functioning well, even though in 9 (17 percent) a superficial tumor recurred and required further transurethral surgery and intravesical drug therapy. Of the 28 patients who had complete responses after initial treatment, 89 percent had functioning tumor-free bladders. CONCLUSIONS Conservative combination treatment may be an acceptable alternative to immediate cystectomy in selected patients with bladder cancer, although a randomized clinical trial that included a group for simultaneous comparison would be required to produce definitive results.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1995

ADJUVANT AND SALVAGE IRRADIATION FOLLOWING RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY FOR PROSTATE CANCER

Monica M. Morris; K.C. Dallow; Anthony L. Zietman; Jeannine Park; Alex F. Althausen; Niall M. Heney; William U. Shipley

PURPOSE We performed a retrospective analysis to assess the durability of benefit derived from irradiation after prostatectomy for pT3N0 disease, and the possibility of cure. METHODS AND MATERIALS We studied 88 patients who were irradiated after prostatectomy and had available prostate specific antigen (PSA) data, no known nodal or metastatic disease, no hormonal treatment, and follow-up of at least 12 months from surgery. Forty patients received adjuvant therapy for a high risk of local failure with undetectable PSA. Forty-eight patients received salvage therapy for elevated PSA levels. Mean follow up was 44 months from date of surgery and 31 months from irradiation. Biochemical failure was strictly defined as a confirmed rise in PSA of >10%, or as the ability to detect a previously undetectable PSA value. RESULTS After salvage irradiation, 69% of patients attained an undetectable PSA. Eighty-eight percent of adjuvant patients were biochemically and clinically free of disease (bNED) at 3 years from prostatectomy. Sixty-eight percent of those receiving salvage irradiation were bNED 3 years after surgery. On univariate analysis, treatment group (adjuvant or salvage), pre-operative PSA, and the status of seminal vesicles were significant prognostic factors. The extent of PSA elevation in the salvage group was also significant. We did not demonstrate a significant difference between those salvage patients referred for persistently elevated PSA as compared to those with a late rise in PSA. On multivariate analysis, the only significant predictor of outcome was treatment group, with adjuvant irradiation having better outcome than salvage. CONCLUSION More than two-thirds of this group of patients remain biochemically disease free at 3 years following irradiation, attesting to a number of potential cures. For patients with stage pT3N0 prostate cancer following radical prostatectomy, our data support the use of either routine postoperative adjuvant irradiation or close PSA follow-up with early salvage treatment.


The Journal of Urology | 1985

Full-Dose Irradiation for Patients with Invasive Bladder Carcinoma: Clinical and Histological Factors Prognostic of Improved Survival

William U. Shipley; Mary Ann Rose; Theresa L. Perrone; Catherine M. Mannix; Niall M. Heney; George R. Prout

We reviewed the outcome of 55 patients treated from 1974 to 1982 by full-dose radiation therapy (6,400 to 6,800 rad) to identify factors associated with tumor radioresponsiveness and patient cure. All patients had histological proof of muscle invasion by tumor. Of the patients 8 (14 per cent) had clinical stage T2, 29 (53 per cent) stage T3 and 18 (33 per cent) stage T4 disease. Thirteen patients are alive, all but 2 without evidence of cancer. Survivors include 1 of 9 patients who underwent salvage cystectomy for a local recurrence. The actuarial 5-year survival rate for the entire group was 28 per cent, with a corrected survival of 33 per cent. Median survival was 2.3 years. Corrected survival for patients with stages T2 and T3 disease was 45 per cent versus 9 per cent for those with stage T4 cancer (p equals 0.009). Within the group with stages T2 and T3 cancer (all with proof of muscle invasion) the most striking prognostic factor was papillary surface histological findings, with local control by radiation therapy alone of 63 per cent versus 20 per cent in the group with solid or flat tumors (p equals 0.01), and corrected 5-year survival of 62 per cent (papillary) versus 0 per cent (flat or solid) (p equals 0.002). Other significant prognostic factors for 5-year survival in this group were extent of transurethral resection (54 per cent complete versus 17 per cent incomplete, p equals 0.009) and ureteral obstruction on excretory urography (47 per cent without versus 14 per cent with, p equals 0.01). Our results suggest that full-dose radiation therapy can be offered to patients with muscle-invading bladder cancer, with a relatively higher probability of success in those with less advanced tumors by clinical stage, papillary surface histological findings and no ureteral obstruction, and in whom a complete transurethral resection is possible.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Long-Term Outcomes in Patients With Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer After Selective Bladder-Preserving Combined-Modality Therapy: A Pooled Analysis of Radiation Therapy Oncology Group Protocols 8802, 8903, 9506, 9706, 9906, and 0233

Raymond H. Mak; Daniel Hunt; William U. Shipley; Jason A. Efstathiou; William Tester; Michael P. Hagan; Donald S. Kaufman; Niall M. Heney; Anthony L. Zietman

PURPOSE Multiple prospective Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) protocols have evaluated bladder-preserving combined-modality therapy (CMT) for muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC), reserving cystectomy for salvage treatment. We performed a pooled analysis of long-term outcomes in patients with MIBC enrolled across multiple studies. PATIENTS AND METHODS Four hundred sixty-eight patients with MIBC were enrolled onto six RTOG bladder-preservation studies, including five phase II studies (RTOG 8802, 9506, 9706, 9906, and 0233) and one phase III study (RTOG 8903). Overall survival (OS) was estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method, and disease-specific survival (DSS), muscle-invasive and non-muscle-invasive local failure (LF), and distant metastasis (DM) were estimated by the cumulative incidence method. RESULTS The median age of patients was 66 years (range, 34 to 93 years), and clinical T stage was T2 in 61%, T3 in 35%, and T4a in 4% of patients. Complete response to CMT was documented in 69% of patients. With a median follow-up of 4.3 years among all patients and 7.8 years among survivors (n = 205), the 5- and 10-year OS rates were 57% and 36%, respectively, and the 5- and 10-year DSS rates were 71% and 65%, respectively. The 5- and 10-year estimates of muscle-invasive LF, non-muscle-invasive LF, and DM were 13% and 14%, 31% and 36%, and 31% and 35%, respectively. CONCLUSION This pooled analysis of multicenter, prospective RTOG bladder-preserving CMT protocols demonstrates long-term DSS comparable to modern immediate cystectomy studies, for patients with similarly staged MIBC. Given the low incidence of late recurrences with long-term follow-up, CMT can be considered as an alternative to radical cystectomy, especially in elderly patients not well suited for surgery.

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