Current Disease Management of Primary Urethral Carcinoma

Standard

Current Disease Management of Primary Urethral Carcinoma. / Janisch, Florian; Abufaraj, Mohammad; Fajkovic, Harun; Kimura, Shoji; Iwata, Takehiro; Nyirady, Peter; Rink, Michael; Shariat, Shahrokh F.

in: EUR UROL FOCUS, Jahrgang 5, Nr. 5, 09.2019, S. 722-734.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ReviewForschung

Harvard

Janisch, F, Abufaraj, M, Fajkovic, H, Kimura, S, Iwata, T, Nyirady, P, Rink, M & Shariat, SF 2019, 'Current Disease Management of Primary Urethral Carcinoma', EUR UROL FOCUS, Jg. 5, Nr. 5, S. 722-734. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euf.2019.07.001

APA

Janisch, F., Abufaraj, M., Fajkovic, H., Kimura, S., Iwata, T., Nyirady, P., Rink, M., & Shariat, S. F. (2019). Current Disease Management of Primary Urethral Carcinoma. EUR UROL FOCUS, 5(5), 722-734. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euf.2019.07.001

Vancouver

Janisch F, Abufaraj M, Fajkovic H, Kimura S, Iwata T, Nyirady P et al. Current Disease Management of Primary Urethral Carcinoma. EUR UROL FOCUS. 2019 Sep;5(5):722-734. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euf.2019.07.001

Bibtex

@article{af0752e0032d4386b12e07fb471b6d3b,
title = "Current Disease Management of Primary Urethral Carcinoma",
abstract = "CONTEXT: Primary urethral cancer (PUC) is a rare cancer entity. Owing to the low incidence of this malignancy, the main body of literature consists mainly of case reports, making evidence-based management recommendations difficult.OBJECTIVE: To review reported disease management strategies of PUC and their impact on oncological outcomes.EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: A systematic research was performed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-analysis (PRISMA) statement using Medline, Scopus, and Web of Science, to find studies of the past 10yr including ≥20 patients, and investigating treatment strategies and their impact on outcomes of the three most frequent histologies: urothelial carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, and squamous cell carcinoma.EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: In localized PUC, penis-sparing surgery can be performed in males, while in females, complete urethrectomy with surrounding tissue is advised to minimize recurrence due to positive margins. Radiotherapy (RT) has worse survival and recurrence rates, as well as more adverse effects, than surgery, limiting its use in genital-preserving therapy. Locally advanced PUC should be treated with multimodal therapy, as monotherapies result in inferior recurrence and survival rates. Extent of surgery is still undecided, favoring radical cyst(oprostat)ectomy with total urethrectomy (RCU). Lymph node involvement is a predictor of survival, highlighting the role of lymph node dissection for disease control and staging. RT can improve survival in combination with surgery and/or chemotherapy (CHT). Neoadjuvant platinum-based CHT can improve overall and recurrence-free survival. At recurrence, salvage therapy with surgery and/or CHT can improve survival. Superficial urothelial carcinoma of the prostatic urethra can be treated with transurethral resection. Stromal invasion often features concomitant bladder cancer with a poor prognosis and requires RCU with or without systemic preoperative CHT.CONCLUSIONS: PUC is a rare malignancy with an often poor natural course, requiring a stage- and gender-specific risk-based treatment strategy. The role of systematic perioperative CHT and the extent of surgery are becoming more important.PATIENT SUMMARY: In this review, we looked at the treatment options for primary urethral cancer. We found that while an organ-confined disease can be managed with local resection, growth beyond the organ border makes a combination of different treatment modalities, such as surgery and systematic chemotherapy, necessary to improve outcomes.",
author = "Florian Janisch and Mohammad Abufaraj and Harun Fajkovic and Shoji Kimura and Takehiro Iwata and Peter Nyirady and Michael Rink and Shariat, {Shahrokh F}",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2019 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.",
year = "2019",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1016/j.euf.2019.07.001",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "722--734",
journal = "EUR UROL FOCUS",
issn = "2405-4569",
publisher = "Elsevier BV",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Current Disease Management of Primary Urethral Carcinoma

AU - Janisch, Florian

AU - Abufaraj, Mohammad

AU - Fajkovic, Harun

AU - Kimura, Shoji

AU - Iwata, Takehiro

AU - Nyirady, Peter

AU - Rink, Michael

AU - Shariat, Shahrokh F

N1 - Copyright © 2019 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

PY - 2019/9

Y1 - 2019/9

N2 - CONTEXT: Primary urethral cancer (PUC) is a rare cancer entity. Owing to the low incidence of this malignancy, the main body of literature consists mainly of case reports, making evidence-based management recommendations difficult.OBJECTIVE: To review reported disease management strategies of PUC and their impact on oncological outcomes.EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: A systematic research was performed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-analysis (PRISMA) statement using Medline, Scopus, and Web of Science, to find studies of the past 10yr including ≥20 patients, and investigating treatment strategies and their impact on outcomes of the three most frequent histologies: urothelial carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, and squamous cell carcinoma.EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: In localized PUC, penis-sparing surgery can be performed in males, while in females, complete urethrectomy with surrounding tissue is advised to minimize recurrence due to positive margins. Radiotherapy (RT) has worse survival and recurrence rates, as well as more adverse effects, than surgery, limiting its use in genital-preserving therapy. Locally advanced PUC should be treated with multimodal therapy, as monotherapies result in inferior recurrence and survival rates. Extent of surgery is still undecided, favoring radical cyst(oprostat)ectomy with total urethrectomy (RCU). Lymph node involvement is a predictor of survival, highlighting the role of lymph node dissection for disease control and staging. RT can improve survival in combination with surgery and/or chemotherapy (CHT). Neoadjuvant platinum-based CHT can improve overall and recurrence-free survival. At recurrence, salvage therapy with surgery and/or CHT can improve survival. Superficial urothelial carcinoma of the prostatic urethra can be treated with transurethral resection. Stromal invasion often features concomitant bladder cancer with a poor prognosis and requires RCU with or without systemic preoperative CHT.CONCLUSIONS: PUC is a rare malignancy with an often poor natural course, requiring a stage- and gender-specific risk-based treatment strategy. The role of systematic perioperative CHT and the extent of surgery are becoming more important.PATIENT SUMMARY: In this review, we looked at the treatment options for primary urethral cancer. We found that while an organ-confined disease can be managed with local resection, growth beyond the organ border makes a combination of different treatment modalities, such as surgery and systematic chemotherapy, necessary to improve outcomes.

AB - CONTEXT: Primary urethral cancer (PUC) is a rare cancer entity. Owing to the low incidence of this malignancy, the main body of literature consists mainly of case reports, making evidence-based management recommendations difficult.OBJECTIVE: To review reported disease management strategies of PUC and their impact on oncological outcomes.EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: A systematic research was performed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-analysis (PRISMA) statement using Medline, Scopus, and Web of Science, to find studies of the past 10yr including ≥20 patients, and investigating treatment strategies and their impact on outcomes of the three most frequent histologies: urothelial carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, and squamous cell carcinoma.EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: In localized PUC, penis-sparing surgery can be performed in males, while in females, complete urethrectomy with surrounding tissue is advised to minimize recurrence due to positive margins. Radiotherapy (RT) has worse survival and recurrence rates, as well as more adverse effects, than surgery, limiting its use in genital-preserving therapy. Locally advanced PUC should be treated with multimodal therapy, as monotherapies result in inferior recurrence and survival rates. Extent of surgery is still undecided, favoring radical cyst(oprostat)ectomy with total urethrectomy (RCU). Lymph node involvement is a predictor of survival, highlighting the role of lymph node dissection for disease control and staging. RT can improve survival in combination with surgery and/or chemotherapy (CHT). Neoadjuvant platinum-based CHT can improve overall and recurrence-free survival. At recurrence, salvage therapy with surgery and/or CHT can improve survival. Superficial urothelial carcinoma of the prostatic urethra can be treated with transurethral resection. Stromal invasion often features concomitant bladder cancer with a poor prognosis and requires RCU with or without systemic preoperative CHT.CONCLUSIONS: PUC is a rare malignancy with an often poor natural course, requiring a stage- and gender-specific risk-based treatment strategy. The role of systematic perioperative CHT and the extent of surgery are becoming more important.PATIENT SUMMARY: In this review, we looked at the treatment options for primary urethral cancer. We found that while an organ-confined disease can be managed with local resection, growth beyond the organ border makes a combination of different treatment modalities, such as surgery and systematic chemotherapy, necessary to improve outcomes.

U2 - 10.1016/j.euf.2019.07.001

DO - 10.1016/j.euf.2019.07.001

M3 - SCORING: Review article

C2 - 31307949

VL - 5

SP - 722

EP - 734

JO - EUR UROL FOCUS

JF - EUR UROL FOCUS

SN - 2405-4569

IS - 5

ER -