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Haas, Maximilian ; Kriegmair, Maximilian C. ; Breyer, Johannes ; Sikic, Danijel ; Wezel, Felix ; Roghmann, Florian ; Brehmer, Mirco ; Wirtz, Ralph M. ; Jarczyk, Jonas ; Erben, Philipp ; Bahlinger, Veronika ; Goldschmidt, Franziska ; Fechner, Guido ; Chen, Jack ; Paxinos, Ellen ; Bates, Michael ; Zengerling, Friedemann ; Bolenz, Christian ; Burger, Maximilian ; Hartmann, Arndt ; Eckstein, Markus

Improving detection of carcinoma in situ in bladder cancer: urinary cytology vs the Xpert® BC Monitor

Haas, Maximilian , Kriegmair, Maximilian C., Breyer, Johannes , Sikic, Danijel, Wezel, Felix, Roghmann, Florian, Brehmer, Mirco, Wirtz, Ralph M., Jarczyk, Jonas, Erben, Philipp, Bahlinger, Veronika, Goldschmidt, Franziska, Fechner, Guido, Chen, Jack, Paxinos, Ellen, Bates, Michael, Zengerling, Friedemann, Bolenz, Christian, Burger, Maximilian, Hartmann, Arndt and Eckstein, Markus (2024) Improving detection of carcinoma in situ in bladder cancer: urinary cytology vs the Xpert® BC Monitor. BJU International.

Date of publication of this fulltext: 29 May 2024 11:53
Article
DOI to cite this document: 10.5283/epub.58355


Abstract

Objective To investigate and compare the performance of urinary cytology and the Xpert BC Monitor test in the detection of bladder cancer in various clinically significant patient cohorts, including patients with carcinoma in situ (CIS), in a prospective multicentre setting, aiming to identify potential applications in clinical practice. Patients and Methods A total of 756 patients ...

Objective

To investigate and compare the performance of urinary cytology and the Xpert BC Monitor test in the detection of bladder cancer in various clinically significant patient cohorts, including patients with carcinoma in situ (CIS), in a prospective multicentre setting, aiming to identify potential applications in clinical practice.
Patients and Methods

A total of 756 patients scheduled for transurethral resection of bladder tumour (TURBT) were prospectively screened between July 2018 and December 2020 at six German University Centres. Central urinary cytology and Xpert BC Monitor tests were performed prior to TURBT. The diagnostic performance of urinary cytology and the Xpert BC Monitor was evaluated according to sensitivity (SN), specificity (SC), negative predictive value (NPV) and positive predictive value (PPV). Statistical comparison of urinary cytology and the Xpert BC Monitor was conducted using the McNemar test.
Results

Of 756 screened patients, 733 (568 male [78%]; median [interquartile range] age 72 [62–79] years) were included. Bladder cancer was present in 482 patients (65.8%) with 258 (53.5%) high-grade tumours. Overall SN, SC, NPV and PPV were 39%, 93%, 44% and 92% for urinary cytology, and 75%, 69%, 59% and 82% for the Xpert BC Monitor. In patients with CIS (concomitant or solitary), SN, SC, NPV and PPV were 59%, 93%, 87% and 50% for urinary cytology, and 90%, 69%, 95% and 50% for the Xpert BC Monitor. The Xpert BC Monitor missed four tumours (NPV = 98%) in patients with solitary CIS, while potentially avoiding 63.3% of TURBTs in inconclusive or negative cystoscopy and a negative Xpert result.
Conclusion

Positive urinary cytology may indicate bladder cancer and should be taken seriously. The Xpert BC Monitor may represent a useful diagnostic tool for correctly identifying patients with solitary CIS and unsuspicious or inconclusive cystoscopy.



Involved Institutions


Details

Item typeArticle
Journal or Publication TitleBJU International
Publisher:Wiley
Date8 May 2024
InstitutionsMedicine > Lehrstuhl für Urologie
Identification Number
ValueType
10.1111/bju.16389DOI
Keywordsbladder cancer, carcinoma in situ, cytology, NMIBC, urine marker, Xpert
Dewey Decimal Classification600 Technology > 610 Medical sciences Medicine
StatusPublished
RefereedYes, this version has been refereed
Created at the University of RegensburgYes
URN of the UB Regensburgurn:nbn:de:bvb:355-epub-583551
Item ID58355

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