Author: Culpan, Meftun; Keser, Ferhat; Acar, Hazal Cansu; Otunctemur, Alper; Kucuk, Eyup Veli; Erdem, Selcuk; Ozer, Murat; Sen, Ugur Tolga; Degirmenci, Enes; Ergul, Rifat; Atis, Ramazan Gokhan; Yildirim, Asif
Title: Impact of delay in cystoscopic surveillance on recurrence and progression rates in patients with nonâ€muscleâ€invasive bladder cancer during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic Cord-id: zmpp1jze Document date: 2021_6_22
ID: zmpp1jze
Snippet: PURPOSE: To evaluate the impact of delay in cystoscopic surveillance on recurrence and progression rates in nonâ€muscleâ€invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 407 patients from four highâ€volume centres with NMIBC that applied for followâ€up cystoscopy were included in our study prospectively. Patients’ demographics and previous tumour characteristics, the presence of tumour in followâ€up cystoscopy, the pathology results of the latest transurethral resection
Document: PURPOSE: To evaluate the impact of delay in cystoscopic surveillance on recurrence and progression rates in nonâ€muscleâ€invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 407 patients from four highâ€volume centres with NMIBC that applied for followâ€up cystoscopy were included in our study prospectively. Patients’ demographics and previous tumour characteristics, the presence of tumour in followâ€up cystoscopy, the pathology results of the latest transurethral resection of bladder tumour (if tumour was detected) and the delay in cystoscopy time were recorded. Our primary outcomes were tumour recurrences detected by followâ€up cystoscopy and progression. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed using the possible factors identified with univariate analyses (P values ≤ .2). RESULTS: A total of 105 patients (25.8%) had tumour recurrence in followâ€up cystoscopy, and 20 (5.1%) of these patients had disease progression according to grade or stage. In multivariate analysis, the number of recurrences (OR: 1.307, P < .001) and the cystoscopy delay time (62â€147 days, OR: 2.424, P = .002; >147 days, OR: 4.883, P < .001) were significant risk factors for tumour recurrence on followâ€up cystoscopy; the number of recurrences (OR: 1.255, P = .024) and cystoscopy delay time (>90 days, OR: 6.704, P = .002) were significant risk factors for tumour progression. CONCLUSIONS: This study showed that a 2â€5 months of delay in followâ€up cystoscopy increases the risk of recurrence by 2.4â€fold, and delay in cystoscopy for more than 3 months increases the probability of progression by 6.7â€fold. We suggest that cystoscopic surveillance should be done during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic according to the schedule set by relevant guidelines.
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