Urethral cancer: a comprehensive review endorsed by the Global Society of Rare Genitourinary Tumours
Urethral cancer: a comprehensive review endorsed by the Global Society of Rare Genitourinary Tumours
Objective: to determine the effectiveness and adverse effects of urethrectomy alone or as part of multimodal therapy (MMT).
Methods: a comprehensive search was conducted across MEDLINE (OVID), EMBASE, LILACS and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) databases, from their inception to the present date. The study cohort comprised individuals aged 16 years and older diagnosed with urethral tumours at any stage who underwent either isolated urethrectomy or urethrectomy as an integral component of MMT.
Results: ninety-two studies comprising 25 480 patients met the inclusion criteria. Surgical outcomes for urethral cancer vary considerably, with 5-year overall survival (OS) ranging from 10% to 68% based on disease extent, approach, and gender. Radiotherapy (RT) alone provides 5-year OS of approximately 40%. Combined regimens provide better outcomes compared to single modalities, including reduced recurrence and enhanced survival. However, trimodal therapy showed survival benefits only for urothelial subtypes, indicating the need to tailor management according to cancer type. MMT with neoadjuvant chemotherapy prior to surgery demonstrated the most consistent survival gains.
Conclusions: the management of urethral cancer demands a nuanced, personalised approach, accounting for factors such as tumour location, sex, and tumour stage. MMT combining surgery, chemotherapy and RT has shown the ability to enhance outcomes in advanced disease. More extensive collaborative studies through specialised centres are imperative to advance evidence-based protocols and refine treatment in order to improve survival.
multidisciplinary care, multimodal therapy, review, urethral cancer, urethral neoplasms
175-184
García-Perdomo, Herney Andrés
b1fdeb7e-a637-4623-a8e3-cdcace9f6136
Dávila-Raigoza, Angélica María
43a6a086-e174-4bed-8248-01b892ddd034
Summers, Ellie
60d45eae-87d1-4b19-b601-6df35ad4e41f
Billingham, Lucinda
eab4a042-3d47-43e0-b865-dbeab9ec278a
Necchi, Andrea
18a2089a-4370-46d0-97ba-52b12c4af26b
Griffiths, Gareth
7fd300c0-d279-4ff6-842d-aa1f2b9b864d
Spiess, Philippe E.
aa6273e7-cef2-49d6-81fb-e512e87f0c0b
August 2024
García-Perdomo, Herney Andrés
b1fdeb7e-a637-4623-a8e3-cdcace9f6136
Dávila-Raigoza, Angélica María
43a6a086-e174-4bed-8248-01b892ddd034
Summers, Ellie
60d45eae-87d1-4b19-b601-6df35ad4e41f
Billingham, Lucinda
eab4a042-3d47-43e0-b865-dbeab9ec278a
Necchi, Andrea
18a2089a-4370-46d0-97ba-52b12c4af26b
Griffiths, Gareth
7fd300c0-d279-4ff6-842d-aa1f2b9b864d
Spiess, Philippe E.
aa6273e7-cef2-49d6-81fb-e512e87f0c0b
García-Perdomo, Herney Andrés, Dávila-Raigoza, Angélica María, Summers, Ellie, Billingham, Lucinda, Necchi, Andrea, Griffiths, Gareth and Spiess, Philippe E.
(2024)
Urethral cancer: a comprehensive review endorsed by the Global Society of Rare Genitourinary Tumours.
BJU International, 134 (2), .
(doi:10.1111/bju.16334).
Abstract
Objective: to determine the effectiveness and adverse effects of urethrectomy alone or as part of multimodal therapy (MMT).
Methods: a comprehensive search was conducted across MEDLINE (OVID), EMBASE, LILACS and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) databases, from their inception to the present date. The study cohort comprised individuals aged 16 years and older diagnosed with urethral tumours at any stage who underwent either isolated urethrectomy or urethrectomy as an integral component of MMT.
Results: ninety-two studies comprising 25 480 patients met the inclusion criteria. Surgical outcomes for urethral cancer vary considerably, with 5-year overall survival (OS) ranging from 10% to 68% based on disease extent, approach, and gender. Radiotherapy (RT) alone provides 5-year OS of approximately 40%. Combined regimens provide better outcomes compared to single modalities, including reduced recurrence and enhanced survival. However, trimodal therapy showed survival benefits only for urothelial subtypes, indicating the need to tailor management according to cancer type. MMT with neoadjuvant chemotherapy prior to surgery demonstrated the most consistent survival gains.
Conclusions: the management of urethral cancer demands a nuanced, personalised approach, accounting for factors such as tumour location, sex, and tumour stage. MMT combining surgery, chemotherapy and RT has shown the ability to enhance outcomes in advanced disease. More extensive collaborative studies through specialised centres are imperative to advance evidence-based protocols and refine treatment in order to improve survival.
Text
Update on urethral cancer LV
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2024 BJU International - 2024 - García‐Perdomo - Urethral cancer a comprehensive review endorsed by the Global Society of Rare (1)
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Accepted/In Press date: 2024
Published date: August 2024
Keywords:
multidisciplinary care, multimodal therapy, review, urethral cancer, urethral neoplasms
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 490836
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490836
ISSN: 1464-4096
PURE UUID: 5f3a6fea-fb50-4ff5-8043-945f7a95b439
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Date deposited: 06 Jun 2024 17:14
Last modified: 27 Jul 2024 01:47
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Contributors
Author:
Herney Andrés García-Perdomo
Author:
Angélica María Dávila-Raigoza
Author:
Ellie Summers
Author:
Lucinda Billingham
Author:
Andrea Necchi
Author:
Philippe E. Spiess
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