# Adoption of robot-assisted radical nephroureterectomy permits a minimally invasive option for management of upper tract urothelial carcinoma in geriatric patients: comparison with non-geriatric patients with intermediate-term oncologic follow-up

**Authors:** Justin M. Refugia, Parth U. Thakker, Timothy K. O’Rourke, Adam Cohen, Aaron Bradshaw, Randy Casals, Maxwell Sandberg, Wyatt Whitman, Sumit Saini, Ashok K. Hemal

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s11701-024-02013-6 · Journal of Robotic Surgery · 2024-06-19

## TL;DR

Robot-assisted surgery for kidney cancer in older patients has similar outcomes and safety as in younger patients.

## Contribution

Demonstrates that age should not disqualify geriatric patients from robot-assisted radical nephroureterectomy for upper tract urothelial carcinoma.

## Key findings

- Geriatric and younger patients had similar bladder-specific and metastasis-free survival rates.
- No increased risk of 30-day perioperative complications in geriatric patients.
- Overall survival was lower in geriatric patients but unrelated to surgical outcomes.

## Abstract

To assess the oncologic efficacy and safety of robot-assisted approach to radical nephroureterectomy (RARNU) in geriatric versus younger patients with upper tract urothelial carcinoma (UTUC). A single-center, retrospective cohort study was conducted from 2009 to 2022 of 145 patients (two cohorts: < 75 and ≥ 75 years old) with non-metastatic UTUC who underwent RARNU. Primary endpoint was UTUC-related recurrence of disease during surveillance (bladder-specific and metastatic). Safety was assessed according to 30-day, modified Clavien–Dindo (CD) classifications (Major: C.D. III–V). Survival estimates were performed using Kaplan–Meier method. There were 89 patients < 75 years (median 65 years) and 56 patients ≥ 75 years (median 81 years). Comparing the young versus geriatric cohorts: median follow-up 38 vs 24 months (p = 0.03, respectively) with similar 3-year bladder-specific recurrence survival (60% vs 67%, HR 0.70, 95% CI [0.35, 1.40], p = 0.31) and metastasis-free survival (79% vs 70%, HR 0.71, 95% CI [0.30, 1.70], p = 0.44). Expectedly, the younger cohort had a significant deviation in overall survival compared to the geriatric cohort at 1-year (89% vs 76%) and 3-years (72% vs 41%; HR 3.29, 95% CI [1.88, 5.78], p < 0.01). The 30-day major (1% vs 0) and minor complications (8% vs 14%, p = 0.87). Limitations include retrospective study design of a high-volume, single-surgeon experience. Compared to younger patients with UTUC, geriatric patients undergoing RARNU have similar oncologic outcomes at intermediate-term follow-up with no increased risk of 30-day perioperative complications. Thus, age alone should not be used to disqualify patients from definitive surgical management of UTUC with RARNU.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** upper tract urothelial carcinoma (MONDO:0020654)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** UTUC (MESH:D012141), metastasis (MESH:D009362)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11186893