Browsing by Author "Schultz, Marcela"
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Publication Comparative Analysis of Very Reduced vs Full Dose BCG Treatment for High-RiskNon-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer:A Contemporary Experience from Chile(2023) Grajales, Valentina; Contieri, Roberto; Tan, Wei Shen; Flores, Marta; Schultz, Marcela; Pinochet, Rodrigo; Bustamante, Alberto; Kamat, Ashish; Mario Fernandez; Fernández Arancibia, MarioBACKGROUND:Adjuvant bacillus Calmette-Gu ́erin (BCG) is recommended for high-risk (HR) non-muscle invasivebladder cancer (NMIBC), but BCG shortages have led to exploration of reduced-dose regimens and shortened maintenancedurations out of necessity, with limited data on treatment efficacy in Latin America.OBJECTIVE:Oncological outcomes of HR-NMIBC patients treated with reduced (RD,1/4th dose) vs full dose (FD) BCGinstillations ofDanish Strain1331 BCG.METHODS:We performed a retrospective study of HR-NMIBC patients treated with BCG between 2003 and 2022 at ourcenter in Santiago Chile. We stratified patients according to either RD (1/4th dose) or FD BCG. Univariate and multivariableCox regression models were used to predict recurrence. Kaplan-Meier method was used to calculate survival estimates.RESULTS:Of a total of 200 patients, 116 (58%) had RD and 84 (42%) FD BCG. Median follow-up was 57 months (IQR:29–100). Patients who received FD BCG had a lower risk of recurrence (HR: 0.41, 95% CI 0.22–0.74) and high-grade(HG)-recurrence (HR: 0.30, 95% CI 0.15–0.61;p= 0.001). More patients in the RD vs FD group progressed to MIBC (10/84vs 2/116;p= 0.18). Additionally, patients were less likely to stop BCG treatment in the RD group compared to the FD groupdue to toxicity (5% vs 11%,p= 0.14).CONCLUSIONS:A 1/4th dose ofDanish Strain1331 BCG treatment was associated with worse recurrence free rate andHG-recurrence rate in our cohort. Patients with RD had lower discontinuation treatment rates due to a reduced toxicity profile.These findings would suggest that RD BCG would compromise oncological outcomes in HR-NMIBC patients.Item Densidad de APE en pacientes PI-RADS 3. Un parámetro clínico útil para su manejo(2019) Tapia, María Fernanda; Labra, Andrés; Adlerstein, Isabel; Olivares, Juan Pablo; Schultz, Marcela; Silva, Claudio; Pinochet, Rodrigo; Orvieto, MarceloAnalizar las biopsias realizadas en paciente categorizados PIRADS 3 en nuestra institución desde el segundo semestre del año 2016 al primer semestre del año 2018 y describir la correlación de la densidad de PSA con la incidencia de cáncer de próstata. Evaluar el rol de la densidadnde PSA en la indicación de estudio histológico en pacientes PIRADS 3. Método: Trabajo autorizado por el comité de ética de nuestra institución. Se realizó búsqueda en el PACs, de todos los informes de RM multiparamétricas de próstata que incluyeran la categoría ¨PIRADS 3¨ en el periodo señalado. De ellos se calculó la densidad de PSA, con el último valor de PSA registrado en la ficha clínica previo a RM y volumen prostático en RM. Se procedió a buscar los pacientes con estudio histológico. Se correlacionó los resultados de biopsias con el valor de densidad de PSA. Realizamos análisis uni y multivariados, análisis estadísticos con sensibilidad, especificidad y uso de curva ROC. Resultados: De las 2416 RMmp de próstata realizadas en nuestra institución en las fechas ya descritas, se encontraron 424 informes catalogados con score PIRADS 3, y 267 de esos pacientes tenían estudio y seguimiento institucional, de los cuales 134 contaban con biopsia. La muestra tenía un promedio de edad de 60 años, y una mediana de densidad de PSA de 0,10 (RIC 0,07-0,14). Se encontraron 36 biopsias con cáncer clínicamente significativo (Gleason > 6), lo que corresponde a 26,8% de la muestra, valor similar al encontrado en la literuatua. En estos pacientes se obtuvo un punto de corte óptimo de densidad de PSA de 0,11, con una sensibilidad y especificidad de 67% y un AUC de 0,68. Una densidad de PSA de 0,11 presenta un OR de 4,1, con una probabilidad de 4 veces más de encontrar un cáncer de próstata por sobre este valor (IC 95% 1,3-9,8), lo cuál es estadísticamente significativo con un p igual a 0,01. Conclusión: La DAPE sobre 0,11 ng/ml/cc puede considerarse como una herramienta adicional para indicar biopsia en pacientes con RMmp PI-RADS3, aumentando la precisión para la detección de cáncer de próstata clínicamente significativos ayudando a disminuir estudios histológicos innecesarios.Item Long-Term Oncological and Functional Outcomes After Robot-Assisted Partial Nephrectomy for Clinically Localized Renal Cell Carcinoma(2022) Otaola, Hugo; Krebs, Alfred; Bermúdez, Hugo; Lyng, Raúl; Orvieto, Marcelo; Stein, Conrado; Labra, Andrés; Schultz, MarcelaBackground: To evaluate long-term oncological and renal function outcomes in patients treated with robot-assisted partial nephrectomy (RAPN) for renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Patients and methods: Patients undergoing RAPN for clinically localized RCC between January 2014 and December 2019 at a tertiary robotic reference center were evaluated. Clinical course, pathologic characteristics, and long-term outcomes were obtained from our institutional review board-approved RCC database. Results: A total of 234 patients were available for analysis. Median follow-up was 46 months (10.8-97.8 months), with 77 patients (32.9%) having at least 5-years of follow-up. Pathology revealed clear-cell RCC in 67.5% (n = 158). Among unfavorable factors, nuclear grades 3 or 4 were found in 67 (29.4%), lymphovascular invasion in 10 (4.3%), positive surgical margins in 22 (9.4%), necrosis in 21 (9%), and sarcomatoid pattern in 2 patients (0.9%). At 12 months, mean serum creatinine was 1.04 mg/dL and 12.9% of patients experienced upstaging in chronic kidney disease. Overall recurrence-free survival at 5-years was 97.8%. There were five local (2.1%) and two distant (0.9%) recurrences, none of them resulting in cancer-specific death. Median time to recurrence was 20 months (11-64 months). Warm ischemia time [hazard ratio (HR) = 1.14, p = 0.034] and sarcomatoid pattern (HR = 124.57, p = 0.001) were the only variables associated with local relapse. Conclusions: Data from this large cohort demonstrate that patients undergoing RAPN have a low incidence of local and distant relapse, resulting in excellent long-term survival while preserving stable renal function in most patients.