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

Abstract
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.