Pharmacy Articles
Pharmacy
Become a Member Today!
Email
Password
Remember me
Forgot your Password?

Invite Code?


Article ID

Home
General Pharmacy
Messages
Conferences
Jobs
Newsletters
My Library
Topics in
Pharmacy
        Adverse Drug Reactions
        Antimicrobials
        Basic Science
        Cardiac/Hypertension
        Chemotherapy/Oncology
        Complementary Medicine
        Dosing
        Drug Approvals
        Drug Interactions
        Drug Resistance
        Drug Trials
        Drug/Product Alerts
        Economics of Medicine
        Major Studies
        Neuro/Psych pharmacology
        Other Drugs
        Over The Counter (OTC)
        Pain Management
        Patient Counseling
        Pharmacoeconomics
        Pharmacokinetics
        Pharmacy Management
        Popular Press
        Stomach/GI
 
Help
Resource Center
RSS News Feeds
Send Newsletter
to a Friend
 
Sponsor
MDLinx Email Article

To email this article, enter your own "From Email" address,
the recipient's "To Email" address, and click the "Send Email" button.
You may send to up to 5 email addresses.
*From Email:  
*To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
What happens to the patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer who refuse cystectomy after neoadjuvant chemotherapy
Maheshwari R et al. - Study highlights the fact that patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer refusing cystectomy after chemotherapy are at high risk for disease-related mortality. At the same time, pts with small, clinically confined single tumors, which can be visibly and microscopically completely resected before neoadjuvant chemotherapy, are most likely to survive without cystectomy.

Methods
  • A prospective study to determine the outcome of pts who refuse cystectomy after receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy
  • 63 such pts evaluated between 1995-2001
  • Tumor and treatment features for a median f/u of 86 mo was assessed, all pts being followed-up for >5 yrs

Results
  • 40 pts (64%) survived, with 54% of them having an intact functioning bladder
  • The number and size of invasive tumors were strongly associated with overall survival
  • The most significant treatment variable predicting better survival was complete resection of the invasive tumor on restaging transurethral resection (TUR) before starting chemotherapy
  • Of 23 pts (36%) who subsequently died of disease, 19 (30%) relapsed with invasive cancer in bladder
  • Over 90% of the surviving pts had solitary, small and low-stage invasive tumors completely resected; 83% survived w/o relapses in the bladder
[more...]
Sponsor

Read a Different Specialty

Pharmacist News & Journals
Allergy/Immunology
Anesthesiology
Cardiology
Dermatology
Drugs
Emergency Medicine
Endocrinology
ENT
Family Medicine
Gastroenterology
Hematology-Oncology
Infectious Disease
Internal Medicine
Nephrology
Neurology
OB/Gyn
Ophthalmology
Orthopedics
Pain
Pediatrics
Practice Management
Psychiatry
Pulmonology
Radiology
Rheumatology
Surgery
Urology

Pharmacy Articles Profession Index

Pharmacist News & Journals
Dentist
Hospital Administrator
Nurse
    Medical Students
Nurse Practitioner
Pharma/Drug Marketer
    Pharmacist
Physician Assistants
Article Search
Keyword:
Search:
Published within:
Sort By:
Date Relevance
    
Sponsor
About MDLinx  |  Contact  |  Advertise with MDLinx  |  Site Map  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Use  |  Sign Up For Newsletters  |  Recommend this Site

English |  Español |  Français |  Deutsch |  中文 |  Руccкий |  Norsk |  Nederlands |  Português |  Italiano

©1999-2009 MDLinx, Inc.