Objective: To retrospectively analyze the clinical outcomes of radiation therapy with or without chemotherapy for bladder cancer in Japan.
Methods: A questionnaire-based survey of patients with pathologically proven bladder cancer treated by definitive radiation therapy between 2002 and 2006 was conducted by the Japanese Radiation Oncology Study Group, and the clinical records of 159 patients were collected from 17 institutions. Concurrent intra-arterial chemoradiotherapy and concurrent systemic chemoradiotherapy were administered in 51 and 33 patients, respectively.
Results: The 5-year overall survival and bladder preservation rates were 48 and 39%, respectively. Eighty-nine (56%) patients developed recurrence (bladder, 48; regional lymph nodes, 4; distant sites, 41). The results of multivariate analysis revealed that adoption of chemotherapy was the only significant prognostic factor for overall survival (relative risk = 0.615 [95% confidence interval: 0.439-0.862], P = 0.005). The type of chemotherapy administered did not significantly affect the local control or overall survival rates. The actuarial 5-year overall survival rates and bladder preservation in the radiation therapy combined with intra-arterial chemotherapy group were 64 and 58%, respectively, and the corresponding rates in the radiation therapy combined with systemic chemotherapy group were 67 and 42%, respectively.
Conclusions: The results of this survey revealed the current status of practice of radiation therapy for bladder cancer in Japan. A multi-institutional prospective study is needed based on the results of this study to determine the optimal radiotherapeutic approach, including the need for concurrent chemotherapy and the appropriate chemotherapy regimen for invasive bladder cancer.
Keywords: bladder cancer; intra-arterial chemotherapy; radiation therapy; systemic chemotherapy.
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