urologic oncology raj s. pruthi, m.d. division of urologic surgery the university of north carolina...

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Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Page 1: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Urologic OncologyUrologic Oncology

Raj S. Pruthi, M.D.Division of Urologic Surgery

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Page 2: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Question 1Question 1

• Which of the following is true regarding prostate ca.?– Common cancer with high mortality– Common cancer with low mortality– Uncommon cancer with high mortality– Uncommon cancer with low mortality

Page 3: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Question 2Question 2

• What is the most common symptom of localized prostate ca.?– Hematuria– Urinary sx’s -- frequency,nocturia– Bony pain– No symptoms

Page 4: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Question 3Question 3

• Prostate ca. screening should begin at age…– 80– 65– 50– 30

Page 5: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Question 4Question 4

• The following are common treatments of prostate ca. except– surgery– radiation– chemotherapy– castration

Page 6: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Question 5Question 5

• The following groups have an increased relative risk of prostate ca. Development, except….– family history– Americans– African-Americans– h/o STDs

Page 7: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Question 6Question 6

• The most common factor associated with bladder cancer develoment in the U.S. is…– family history– h/o STDs– industrial exposure -- aniline dyes/aromatic

amines– smoking

Page 8: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Question 7Question 7

• The most symptom of bladder cancer is…– no symptoms– hematuria– recurrent UTIs– bony pain

Page 9: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Question 8Question 8

• Bladder cancer is most commonly…– adenocarcinoma– squamous cell ca.– transitional cell ca.– clear cell ca.

Page 10: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Question 9Question 9

• Renal cell carcinoma– is a “transitional cell ca” cell type– has a very benign course / does not typically

require any treatment– typically requires a nephrectomy for

localized disease– is very responsive to radiation therapy

Page 11: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Question 10Question 10

• Testicular cancer….– is rarely curable– is resistant to chemotherapy– commonly presents a painless testicular

lump– is most common in men over age 40

Page 12: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Prostate CancerProstate Cancer

• 200,000 new cases per year -- 1st

• 40,000 deaths per year -- 2nd

• Lifetime risk = 1 in 8

Page 13: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

PresentationPresentation

• 1950– 28% localized– 72% locally-extensive / metastatic

• 2000– 80% localized (no symptoms)– 20% locally-extensive / metastatic

Page 14: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Prostate Cancer:Symptoms

Prostate Cancer:Symptoms

• Localized (curable) = NONE!

• Locally-extensive = voiding symptoms

• Metastatic = bony pain– spine, pelvis, ribs, skull, long bones

(prostate cancer patients may have BPH)

Page 15: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Risk FactorsRisk Factors

• Age

• Ethnicity

• Family History

• Geographic Variation

Page 16: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

AgeAge

• 95% occur ages 45 - 90

• exponential increase after age 50

age risk

<40 1 in 10,000

40-59 1 in 100

60-79 1 in 8

Page 17: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

EthnicityEthnicity

Relative risk (# / 100,000)

• African Americans 90

• White Americans 50

• Japanese Americans 20

• Native Japanese 5

Page 18: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Geographic Variation

HIGH

MEDIUM

LOW

Page 19: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Family HistoryFamily History

• 10 % are familial

• Most occur in patients < age 55

• Those with family hx have higher risk:– 1 relative 2X– 2 relatives 5X– 3 relatives 11X

Page 20: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

DetectionDetection

» PSA (prostate specific antigen)

» DRE (digital rectal exam)

Page 21: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Detection:PSA

Detection:PSA

• serine protease

• bound and free forms

• produced by prostate tissue only

• produced by benign and malignant cells– not cancer specific

• cancer produces higher levels PSA

Page 22: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

PSA:Elevation

PSA:Elevation

» CANCER

» Enlarged prostate (BPH)

» Prostatitis

» Prostate infarct

ØDRE

ØBicycle riding, sexual activity, etc.

Page 23: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

ScreeningScreening

• YEARLY AFTER AGE 50

• YEARLY AFTER AGE 40– African-Americans

– Family History

Page 24: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

DetectionDetection

• Abnormal DRE

OR

• Abnormal PSABIOPSY

Page 25: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

TRUS / PNBx

Page 26: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

PathologyPathology

• Adenocarcinoma • Spread by direct extension, perineural

invasion, lymphatics• Found in peripheral zone• Spread to

– seminal vesicles

– lymph nodes

– bones

Page 27: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Pathology:Grade

Pathology:Grade

• Gleason score ( 2-10)– 2-6 = low grade– 7 = intermediate– 8-10 = high grade

• Important prognostic info.

• High grades = aggressive cancers

Page 28: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Pathology:Stage

Pathology:Stage

A PSA or TURP detected T1

B Nodule on Prostate T2

C Extends beyond ProstateT3,T4

D1 Spread to LNs N+

D2 Distant Spread (bones) M+

Page 29: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

TreatmentTreatment

• Nothing - “Watchful Waiting”

• Surgery - “Radical Prostatectomy”

• Radiation - – “External Beam Radiation”– “Brachytherapy”

• Hormone - “Androgen Ablation”

Page 30: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Treatment OptionsTreatment Options

• T1, T2 surgery, radiation (ebRT, brachy), watchful waiting

• T3, T4 radiation (ebRT), hormones

• N+, M+ hormones

Page 31: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Radical Prostatectomy

Page 32: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Radical Prostatectomy

Page 33: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Radical ProstatectomyRadical Prostatectomy

Page 34: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Puboprostatic Ligs. / DVCPuboprostatic Ligs. / DVC

Page 35: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Apical / Urethral DissectionApical / Urethral Dissection

Page 36: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Lateral PediclesLateral Pedicles

Page 37: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Seminal VesiclesSeminal Vesicles

Page 38: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Bladder NeckBladder Neck

Page 39: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Bladder Neck PreservationBladder Neck Preservation

Page 40: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Urethral-Bladder AnastamosisUrethral-Bladder Anastamosis

Page 41: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Prostate SpecimenProstate Specimen

Page 42: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Radical Prostatectomy

Page 43: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Bladder CancerBladder Cancer

• 40,000 cases per year

• 10,000 deaths per year

• 2nd most common urologic malignancy

• males:females = 3:1

Page 44: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

PathologyPathology

• Transitional cell ca. = 90%

• Squamous cell ca. = 8%

• Adenoca. = 2%

Page 45: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

EtiologyEtiology

• Enviromental factors – cigarettes– carcinogenic aromatic amines– cyclophosphamide– pelvic irradiation– schistosomiasis

Page 46: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

StageStage

A confined to epithelium Ta

A invade submucosa T1

B invade muscle T2, 3a

C Extends perivesicle fatT3bc,4

D Spread to LNs, Distant N+M+

Page 47: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Signs / SymptomsSigns / Symptoms

• Hematuria

• Irritative voiding sx’s

Page 48: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

DiagnosisDiagnosis

• Cystoscopy

• Urine Cytology

• IVP / CT

• TURBT

Page 49: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

TreatmentTreatment

• Superficial (Ta,T1)– TURBT +/-

intravesical therapy

• Muscle-invasive (T2,3a)– cystectomy

• Metastatic– chemotherapy

Page 50: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Treatment - CystectomyTreatment - Cystectomy

Page 51: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Upper tract TCCaUpper tract TCCa

• Renal pelvis / ureter

• Dx: IVP, cytology, ureteroscopy

• Rx: – Nephroureterectomy– partial (distal) ureterctomy– laser ablation

• F/U: Bladder surveillence

Page 52: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Renal Cell CarcinomaRenal Cell Carcinoma

• 20,000 new cases per year

• 10,000 deaths per year

• males:females = 2:1

Page 53: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

PathologyPathology

• Adenocarcinoma

• arise from proximal tubule

• spread via direct extension, lymphatics, hematogenous

• Spread to:– LNs, lung, bone, liver

Page 54: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Signs / SymptomsSigns / Symptoms

• Hematuria

• Flank pain

• Flank mass

• Incidentally discovered

Page 55: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

DiagnosisDiagnosis

• CT scan with / without contrast– heterogeneous, enhancing mass

• Renal ultrasound

• MRI

• IVP

Page 56: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

StageStage

I confined to kidney T1,T2

II confined to Gerotas T3a

III renal vein, v. cava, LNs T3bc,N+

IV Adj.orgs, distant met T4, M+

Page 57: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

TreatmentTreatment

• T1, T2, T3– radical nephrectomy– cavotomy/extract tumor thrombus for T3b,c

• T4,N+,M+– immunotherapy (+/- nephrectomy)

Page 58: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Tumor ThrombusTumor Thrombus

Page 59: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Tumor ThrombusTumor Thrombus

Page 60: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Radical NephrectomyRadical Nephrectomy

Page 61: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Patient positioning:Flank

Patient positioning:Flank

Page 62: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Radical NephrectomyRadical Nephrectomy

Page 63: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Partial nephrectomyPartial nephrectomy

Page 64: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

IncisionsIncisions

Page 65: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Radical NephrectomyRadical Nephrectomy

Page 66: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Radical NephrectomyRadical Nephrectomy

Page 67: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Partial nephrectomyPartial nephrectomy

Page 68: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Hilar VesselsHilar Vessels

Page 69: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Renal VeinRenal Vein

Page 70: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Renal ArteryRenal Artery

Page 71: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

IncisionsIncisions

Page 72: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Renal TumorsRenal Tumors

• RCCa

• Angiomyolipoma

• Oncocytoma

• Renal pelvic TCCa

• Complex renal cysts

Page 73: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Survival (5-year)

Survival (5-year)

• I = 75%

• II = 65%

• III = 40%

• IV = 10%

Page 74: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Testicular CarcinomaTesticular Carcinoma

• 5,000 new cases per year

• 1,000 deaths per year• Most common solid

tumor of young adult men (age 20-40)

Page 75: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

PathologyPathology

• 95% germ cell tumors– seminoma– embryonal cell ca.– choriocarcinoma– teratocarcinoma– yolk sac tumors

• 5% interstitial cell tumors (Sertoli, Leydig)

Page 76: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

PathologyPathology

• Rapidly growing tumors

• Metastasize early– retroperitoneal, mediastinal LNs– lungs,liver,brain,bones

• Tumor markers– beta-HCG– alpha-fetoprotein

Page 77: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

StagingStaging

• T=tumor• T1 = confined to testis

• T2 = invades tunica alb.

• T3 = invades cord / scrotum

• N=lymph nodes• N1 = < 2cm

• N2 = 2 - 5 cm

• N3 = > 5 cm

• M = distant metastasis

Page 78: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Signs / SymptomsSigns / Symptoms

• Painless testicular mass– considered malignant

• virilization, gynecomastia

• secondary hydrocele

• retroperitoneal mass

Page 79: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

TreatmentTreatment

• Radical orchiectomy

• Retroperitoneal lymph node dissection

• Radiation

• Chemotherapy

All treatments highly effective

Page 80: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

SurvivalSurvival

• Seminoma = 98%

• Non-seminoma = 95%

Page 81: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Penile cancerPenile cancer

• Uncommon in U.S.

• Rare in circumcised (at birth) men

Page 82: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

PathologyPathology

• Squamous cell ca.

• CIS– Erythroplasia of Queyrat / Bowens disease

• Chronic inflammation, phimosis

Page 83: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Signs / SymptomsSigns / Symptoms

• Penile lesion / mass / ulcer on glans, foreskin, shaft

• Secondary infection may co-exist

• May be hidden by phimosis

• Inguinal lymph nodes

Page 84: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

TreatmentTreatment

• Excisional bx

• Partial vs. total penectomy

• Inguinal lymph node dissection

• Radiation and chemotherapy have limited efficacy / palliative

Page 85: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

SurvivalSurvival

• Localized (confined to penis) = 80%

• Inguinal lymph nodes = 30%

• Distant metastasis < 5%

Page 86: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Adrenal tumorsAdrenal tumors

• Cysts

• Adenomas

• Myolipomas

• Adenocarcinomas

• Pheochromocytomas

• Aldosteronoma

Page 87: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Adrenocortical Ca.Adrenocortical Ca.

• > 6 cm in size

• > 50% functional

• Highly malignant

• Dx = CT, MRI, serum/urine chemistries

• Rx– adrenalectomy– mitotane

Page 88: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

PheochromocytomaPheochromocytoma

• Hypersecretion of E, NE– htn, palpitations, diaphoresis

• 10% are:– malignant, bilateral, extra-adrenal

• Dx: CT, MRI, serum/urine chemistries

• Rx = surgical excision

Page 89: Urologic Oncology Raj S. Pruthi, M.D. Division of Urologic Surgery The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill