Abstract
Objective
High incidence of upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma has been reported in South- Western area of Taiwan, where arsenic water contamination was considered to be the main cause. However, there is no definite proof to show the correlation between the arsenic water contamination and upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma. To investigate the clinical and epidemiological features of the patients with upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma between arsenic water endemic and non-endemic areas, we analyzed patients in terms of characteristics, stratified overall survival, disease-free survival and cancer-specific survival
Method
The records of a total 1194 patients diagnosed with upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma were retrospectively reviewed. Clinical data and current medical status were collected from medical records. Statistical analyses were performed to determine the clinical variables and stratified survival curves between endemic and non-endemic groups.
Results
Female predominance was revealed in both endemic and non-endemic groups (Male:Female=1:1.2- 1.4). No statistical differences were found in histological types, staging and tumor size among two groups. Nonetheless, patients with characteristics of aging and having end stage renal disease outnumbered in non-endemic group while higher prevalence of previous bladder tumor and more ureteral tumor were found in endemic group. Adjusted stratified cumulative survival curves suggested poorer prognosis fashion in endemic patients, especially in disease free survival of early stage disease.
Conclusions
Higher mortality rate with more previous bladder cancer history and ureteral tumor were seen in patients with upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma residing in arsenic water contamination area. This may attribute to the long-term carcinogenesis effect of arsenic underground water.