Is it justified to avoid radical cystoprostatectomy in elderly patients with invasive transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder?

Background. Although radical cystectomy is accepted by most urologists as the treatment of choice for invasive carcinoma of the bladder and age alone is not considered a contraindication for radical surgery, many consider radical major operations to be unsuitable for elderly patients. Methods. The a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer 1993-05, Vol.71 (10), p.3098-3101
Hauptverfasser: Leibovitch, Ilan, Avigad, Itamar, Ben‐Chaim, Jacob, Nativ, Ofer, Goldwasser, Benad
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container_end_page 3101
container_issue 10
container_start_page 3098
container_title Cancer
container_volume 71
creator Leibovitch, Ilan
Avigad, Itamar
Ben‐Chaim, Jacob
Nativ, Ofer
Goldwasser, Benad
description Background. Although radical cystectomy is accepted by most urologists as the treatment of choice for invasive carcinoma of the bladder and age alone is not considered a contraindication for radical surgery, many consider radical major operations to be unsuitable for elderly patients. Methods. The authors compared the results of radical cystectomy in 42 elderly patients to those in patients 69 years old or younger and to a group of 21 elderly patients, matched by stage of disease and severity of medical problems, who received alternative treatment. Results. The overall operative mortality rate was 6.3% (seven patients). Three (4.3%) postoperative deaths in the younger group and four (9.5%) deaths among elderly patients were recorded. The operative morbidity and mortality did not differ significantly between those two groups (P = 0.1). Among the patients who received alternative therapy, 13 (61.9%) died within the first 6 months, and only 3 survived more than 12 months. Morbidity was encountered in 97% of these patients. Conclusions. The authors showed that radical cystectomy is a relatively safe procedure for elderly patients. The elderly patient who is thought to be unsuitable for surgery not only is deprived of his right to definite curative therapy but also is exposed to higher morbidity and mortality and worse quality of life than are those who undergo operations. The authors conclude that it is unjustified to avoid radical cystectomy in the elderly population on the basis of age alone.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/1097-0142(19930515)71:10<3098::AID-CNCR2820711033>3.0.CO;2-I
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Although radical cystectomy is accepted by most urologists as the treatment of choice for invasive carcinoma of the bladder and age alone is not considered a contraindication for radical surgery, many consider radical major operations to be unsuitable for elderly patients. Methods. The authors compared the results of radical cystectomy in 42 elderly patients to those in patients 69 years old or younger and to a group of 21 elderly patients, matched by stage of disease and severity of medical problems, who received alternative treatment. Results. The overall operative mortality rate was 6.3% (seven patients). Three (4.3%) postoperative deaths in the younger group and four (9.5%) deaths among elderly patients were recorded. The operative morbidity and mortality did not differ significantly between those two groups (P = 0.1). Among the patients who received alternative therapy, 13 (61.9%) died within the first 6 months, and only 3 survived more than 12 months. Morbidity was encountered in 97% of these patients. Conclusions. The authors showed that radical cystectomy is a relatively safe procedure for elderly patients. The elderly patient who is thought to be unsuitable for surgery not only is deprived of his right to definite curative therapy but also is exposed to higher morbidity and mortality and worse quality of life than are those who undergo operations. 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Although radical cystectomy is accepted by most urologists as the treatment of choice for invasive carcinoma of the bladder and age alone is not considered a contraindication for radical surgery, many consider radical major operations to be unsuitable for elderly patients. Methods. The authors compared the results of radical cystectomy in 42 elderly patients to those in patients 69 years old or younger and to a group of 21 elderly patients, matched by stage of disease and severity of medical problems, who received alternative treatment. Results. The overall operative mortality rate was 6.3% (seven patients). Three (4.3%) postoperative deaths in the younger group and four (9.5%) deaths among elderly patients were recorded. The operative morbidity and mortality did not differ significantly between those two groups (P = 0.1). Among the patients who received alternative therapy, 13 (61.9%) died within the first 6 months, and only 3 survived more than 12 months. 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subjects Adult
Age Factors
Aged
Biological and medical sciences
bladder neoplasm
Carcinoma, Transitional Cell - surgery
Cystectomy - methods
elderly
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
postoperative complications
Prostatectomy - methods
radical cystectomy
Retrospective Studies
Surgery (general aspects). Transplantations, organ and tissue grafts. Graft diseases
Surgery of the urinary system
transitional cell carcinoma
Urinary Bladder Neoplasms - surgery
title Is it justified to avoid radical cystoprostatectomy in elderly patients with invasive transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder?
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