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A risk-group classification model in patients with bladder cancer under neoadjuvant cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy.

Matteo FerroGiuseppe LucarelliOttavio de CobelliPasquale DolceDaniela TerraccianoGennaro MusiAngelo PorrecaGian Maria BusettoFrancesco Del GiudiceFrancesco SoriaPaolo GonteroFrancesco CantielloRocco DamianoFabio CrocerossaAbdal Rahman Abu FarhanRiccardo AutorinoMihai Dorin VartolomeiMichele MarchioniAndrea MariAndrea MinerviniNicola LongoGiuseppe CelentanoFrancesco ChianconeSisto PerdonàPaola Del PretePasquale DitonnoMichele BattagliaStefania ZamboniAlessandro AntonelliFrancesco GrecoGiorgio Ivan RussoRodolfo HurleNicolae CrisanMatteo ManfrediFrancesco PorpigliaDario RiberaPietro De PlacidoSergio FacchiniLuca ScafuriAntonio VerdeGiuseppe Di LorenzoVincenzo CosimatoAngelo LucianoVincenzo Francesco CaputoFelice CrocettoCarlo Buonerba
Published in: Future oncology (London, England) (2021)
The objective of the current research was to explore the potential prognostic value of readily available clinical and pathologic variables in bladder cancer. The novel association found between cholesterol levels and prognosis may provide the rationale for exploring novel treatments. Patients included had histologically confirmed urothelial bladder cancer and were treated with at least 3 cycles of cisplatin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy before radical cystectomy with lymphadenectomy. A total of 245 patients at low, intermediate and high risk, presenting with 0-1, 2 or 3-4 risk factors, including positive lymph nodes, Hb <12.8, NLR ≥2.7 and cholesterol levels ≥199, were included. Five-year cancer-specific survival rate was 0.67, 0.78 and 0.94 at high, intermediate and low risk, respectively. Total cholesterol levels at the time of cystectomy may represent a commonly assessable prognostic factor and may be incorporated in a clinically meaningful risk-group classification model.
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