IntroductionPenile carcinoma has an incidence of 4,000 cases in Europe. The therapy and prognosis depend decisively on the lymph node status. Lymph node metastases are detected in 23–65% cases depending on the histopathological pattern. Due to improved diagnostic methods an early detection of tumor stage is possible. Multimodal therapeutic concepts can offer curability for a subset of patients, even those suffering from advanced disease.Material and methodsCurrent data on penile cancer based on a selective review of the literature by PubMed and the EAU guidelines 2009.ResultsInvasive diagnostic tools, such as fine–needle biopsy (FNB) and dynamic sentinel node biopsy (DSNB), improved the diagnosis of lymph node status considerably and reduced the morbidity in specialized centers. The application of 18F–FDG–PET/CT for metastases detection needs further evaluation due to inconsistent results. Inguinal lymphadenectomy is the therapeutic standard in case of metastases proof. It was possible to reduce the complications due to the new modified operation techniques. Patients with extended lymph node and distant metastases have a poor prognosis. Different systemic polychemotherapy regimes are applied currently and are associated with poor outcome (response rates <50%) and high morbidity. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is recommended in patients with unresectable and relapsing lymph node metastases.ConclusionsCurrently, inconsistent therapy regimens are applied for metastatic penile cancer. Standardization is urgently needed through the development of high–quality studies and long–term registers in order to lower the morbidity and increase the efficiency of diagnosis and therapy.
Introduction. Aim of this study was to assess the safety and efficacy of injection of autologous muscle-derived cells into the urinary sphincter for treatment of postprostatectomy urinary incontinence in men and to characterize the injected cells prior to transplantation. Methods. 222 male patients with stress urinary incontinence and sphincter damage after uroloical procedures were treated with transurethral injection of autologous muscle-derived cells. The transplanted cells were investigated after cultivation and prior to application by immunocytochemistry using different markers of myogenic differentiation. Feasibility and functionality assessment was achieved with a follow-up of at least 12 months. Results. Follow-up was at least 12 months. Of the 222 treated patients, 120 responded to therapy of whom 26 patients (12%) were continent, and 94 patients (42%) showed improvement. In 102 (46%) patients, the therapy was ineffective. Clinical improvement was observed on average 4.7 months after transplantation and continued in all improved patients. The cells injected into the sphincter were at least ~50% of myogenic origin and representative for early stages of muscle cell differentiation. Conclusions. Transurethral injection of muscle-derived cells into the damaged urethral sphincter of male patients is a safe procedure. Transplanted cells represent different phases of myogenic differentiation.
Purpose. To investigate and relate the ultrashort-term and long-term courses of determinants for foreign body reaction as biocompatibility predictors for meshes in an animal model. Materials and Methods. Three different meshes (TVT, UltraPro, and PVDF) were implanted in sheep. Native and plasma coated meshes were placed bilaterally: (a) interaperitoneally, (b) as fascia onlay, and (c) as muscle onlay (fascia sublay). At 5 min, 20 min, 60 min, and 120 min meshes were explanted and histochemically investigated for inflammatory infiltrate, macrophage infiltration, vessel formation, myofibroblast invasion, and connective tissue accumulation. The results were related to long-term values over 24 months. Results. Macrophage invasion reached highest extents with up to 60% in short-term and decreased within 24 months to about 30%. Inflammatory infiltrate increased within the first 2 hours, the reached levels and the different extents and ranking among the investigated meshes remained stable during long-term follow up. For myofibroblasts, connective tissue, and CD31+ cells, no activity was detected during the first 120 min. Conclusion. The local inflammatory reaction is an early and susceptible event after mesh implantation. It cannot be influenced by prior plasma coating and does not depend on the localisation of implantation.
This phase II trial assessed temsirolimus, an inhibitor of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), as second-line therapy in patients with metastatic transitional carcinoma of the urothelium (TCCU) after failure of platinum containing therapy. From June/2009 to June/2011, we enrolled 15 patients in this trial. Primary endpoint was overall survival, as secondary endpoints we defined time to disease progression, safety and QoL along treatment. Patients with progressive TCCU after prior platinum-based chemotherapy received weekly 25 mg of temsirolimus for 8 weeks. Evaluation for response was accomplished every 8 weeks according to the RECIST criteria, QoL assessment was done every 4 weeks using the QLQ-C30 questionnaire, adverse events (AEs) were recorded and graded using NCI-CTC criteria. Fifteen patients were enrolled in this study, of whom 14 (93%) were available for activity, safety and QoL assessment. We treated 10 (71%) male and 4 female (29%) patients. Median age was 64,7 years (45-76). Patients received on average 13 (3-15) infusions of temsirolimus. As per protocol, no sufficient benefit on overall survival was observed, we early stopped the study after 14 patients. Median time to progression was 2.5 months (77 days), median overall survival was 3.5 months (107 days). Four patients with stable disease were observed. QoL assessment along treatment revealed a reduction of EORTC-QLQ-C30, Global Health Status subscale, from initial 7.86 to 5.00. Temsirolimus was well tolerated. As Grade 3-4 adverse events, we observed fatigue (n=2), leukopenia (n=2) and thrombopenia (n=2). All other adverse events were graded 1-2 in nature. Temsirolimus seems to have poor activity in patients with progressive metastasized TCCU after failure of platinum containing first-line therapy.
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