4.3 Article

T1 bladder carcinoma with variant histology: pathological features and clinical significance

Journal

VIRCHOWS ARCHIV
Volume 480, Issue 5, Pages 989-998

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00428-021-03264-6

Keywords

Bladder; T1 urothelial carcinoma; Variant histology; Biomarker; Staging

Categories

Funding

  1. FIS (Ministry of Health), Madrid, Spain [PI17/01981]
  2. CRUE-CSIC agreement
  3. Springer Nature

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This study aimed to categorize high-grade T1 bladder urothelial carcinoma into risk groups based on variant histology. The presence of variant histology was identified as a significant predictor of disease-free survival and cancer-specific survival in HGT1 bladder cancer. The study implies that treating micropapillary HGT1 urothelial carcinoma as a high-risk cancer is supported, and nested, glandular, and basaloid should also be considered high-risk due to their aggressive behavior and limited response to certain therapies.
The aim of the study was to stratify high-grade T1 (HGT1) bladder urothelial carcinoma into risk categories based on the presence of variant histology when compared to conventional urothelial carcinoma. The clinicopathological features of 104 HGT1 cases of urothelial carcinoma of the bladder with variant histology present in 34 (37%) were assessed. The endpoint of the study was disease-free survival and cancer-specific survival. Overall, variant histology was identified as a significant predictor of disease-free survival (P = 0.035). The presence of any specific variant histology (squamous, glandular, micropapillary, nested, microcystic, inverted growth, villous-like, basaloid, and lymphoepithelioma-like) was identified as a significant predictor of disease-free survival (P = 0.008) and cancer-specific survival (P = 0.0001) in HGT1 bladder cancer. Therefore, our results support including micropapillary HGT1 urothelial carcinoma within the aggressive high-risk category, as suggested by some recent clinical guidelines, but also favor nested, glandular, and basaloid to be placed in the high-risk category due to their potential of aggressive, life-threatening behavior and their limited response to bacillus Calmette-Guerin therapy. Conversely, the low-risk category would include urothelial carcinomas with squamous, inverted growth, or microcystic morphology, all with limited life-threatening potential and good response to current therapy. A very low-risk category would finally include patients whose tumors present villous-like or lymphoepithelioma-like morphology. In conclusion, our findings support the value of reporting the variant histology as a feature of variable aggressiveness in HGT1 urothelial carcinoma of the bladder.

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