Affiliation:
1. Department of Pathology The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions Baltimore MD USA
2. Department of Urology The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions Baltimore MD USA
3. Johns Hopkins Greenberg Bladder Cancer Institute Baltimore MD USA
4. Department of Oncology The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions Baltimore MD USA
5. Department of Pathology Tenon Hospital Paris France
Abstract
AimsSmall cell bladder carcinoma (SCBC) is a rare, divergent form of urothelial carcinoma (UC). We aimed to determine whether pure (n = 16) and mixed (SCBC and UC; n = 30) tumours differed in pathology, gene expression characteristics, genetic alterations, and clinical outcomes.Methods and resultsForty (87%) patients received first‐line chemotherapy. Twenty‐nine patients had no metastatic disease at diagnosis and underwent radical cystectomy. There were no differences in age, sex, race distribution, tumour size, stage at presentation, therapy response with pathological downstaging to ≤ypT1N0, or overall or progression‐free survival (PFS) between pure and mixed tumours. There was a longer PFS among downstaged chemotherapy‐responding tumours ≤ypT2N0M0 than among unresponsive tumours ≥ypT2 ≥ yN1M1 (P = 0.001). Patients who achieved pathological downstaging with neoadjuvant chemotherapy (n = 10) were stage cT2N0M0 at the time of diagnosis and were alive at the last follow‐up (median 37 months), while 46% of patients who failed to achieve pathological downstaging were alive at the last follow‐up (median 38 months; P = 0.008). RNA sequencing showed that the UC of mixed SCBC had similar neural expression signatures to pure SCBC. DNA sequencing revealed alterations in TERT (83%), P53 (56%), ARID1A (28%), RB1 (22%), and BRCA2 (11%). Immunohistochemistry for RB1 showed loss of expression in 18/19 (95%) patients, suggesting frequent pathway downregulation despite a low prevalence of RB1 mutation.ConclusionPatients with pure and mixed SCBC have similar outcomes and these outcomes are determined by the pathological stage at RC and are best among patients who have pathological downstaging after NAC.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Subject
General Medicine,Histology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Cited by
3 articles.
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