International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) Consensus Conference on Current Issues in Bladder Cancer

Author:

Lopez-Beltran Antonio1,Raspollini Maria R.2,Hansel Donna3,Compérat Eva4,Williamson Sean R.5,Liedberg Fredrik6,Iczkowski Kenneth A.7,Bubendorf Lukas8,van der Kwast Theodorus H.9,Cheng Liang10,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Morphological Sciences, Cordoba University Medical School, Cordoba, Spain

2. University Hospital Careggi, Florence, Italy

3. University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX

4. Medical University of Vienna, Austria

5. Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH

6. Institution of Translational Medicine, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden

7. Department of Pathology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI

8. Institute of Medical Genetics and Pathology, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland

9. Laboratory Medicine Program, University Health Network and Princess Margaret Cancer Center, Toronto, ON, Canada

10. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Brown University Warren Alpert Medical School; Lifespan Academic Medical Center, and the Legorreta Cancer Center at Brown University, Providence, RI

Abstract

Emerging data on T1 bladder cancer subcategorization (aka substaging) suggests a correlation with oncological outcomes. The International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) organized the 2022 consensus conference in Basel, Switzerland to focus on current issues in bladder cancer and tasked working group 3 to make recommendations for T1 subcategorization in transurethral bladder resections. For this purpose, the ISUP developed and circulated a survey to their membership querying approaches to T1 bladder cancer subcategorization. In particular, clinical relevance, pathological reporting, and endorsement of T1 subcategorization in the daily practice of pathology were surveyed. Of the respondents of the premeeting survey, about 40% do not routinely report T1 subcategory. We reviewed literature on bladder T1 subcategorization, and screened selected articles for clinical performance and practicality of T1 subcategorization methods. Published literature offered evidence of the clinical rationale for T1 subcategorization and at the conference consensus (83% of conference attendants) was obtained to report routinely T1 subcategorization of transurethral resections. Semiquantitative T1 subcategorization was favored (37%) over histoanatomic methods (4%). This is in line with literature findings on practicality and prognostic impact, that is, a shift of publications from histoanatomic to semiquantitative methods or by reports incorporating both methodologies is apparent over the last decade. However, 59% of participants had no preference for either methodology. They would add a comment in the report briefly stating applied method, interpretation criteria (including cutoff), and potential limitations. When queried on the terminology of T1 subcategorization, 34% and 20% of participants were in favor of T1 (microinvasive) versus T1 (extensive) or T1 (focal) versus T1 (nonfocal), respectively.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Pathology and Forensic Medicine,Surgery,Anatomy

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