Age at diagnosis is a determinant factor of renal cell carcinoma-specific survival in patients treated with nephrectomy.

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Karakiewicz, Pierre, I. | Jeldres, Claudio | Suardi, Nazareno | Hutterer, George, C. | Perrotte, Paul | Capitanio, Umberto | Ficarra, Vincenzo | Cindolo, Luca | de La Taille, Alexandre | Tostain, Jacques | Mulders, Peter, F. | Salomon, Laurent, J. | Zigeuner, Richard | Schips, Luigi | Chautard, Denis | Valeri, Antoine | Lechevallier, Eric | Descots, Jean-Luc | Lang, Herve | Mejean, Arnaud | Verhoest, Gregory | Patard, Jean-Jacques

Edité par CCSD ; Canadian Urological Association -

International audience. OBJECTIVE: Based on combined data for 4880 patients, 2 previous studies reported that advanced age is a predictor of increased renal cell carcinoma-specific mortality (RCC-SM). We explored the effect of age in cubic spline analyses to identify the age groups with the most elevated risk for renal cell carcinoma (RCC). METHODS: Our study included 3595 patients from 14 European centres who had partial or radical nephrectomies. We used the Kaplan-Meier method to compile life tables, and we performed Cox regression analyses to assess RCC-SM. Covariates included age at diagnosis, sex, TNM (tumour, node, metastasis) stage, tumour size, Fuhrman grade, symptom classification and histological subtype. RESULTS: Age ranged from 10 to 89 (mean 63, median 67) years. The median duration of follow-up was 2.9 years. The median survival for the cohort was 13.4 years. Stage distribution was as follows: 1915 patients (53.3%) had stage I disease, 388 (10.8%) had stage II, 895 (24.9%) had stage III and 397 (11.0%) had stage IV disease. In multivariate analyses, we coded age at diagnosis as a cubic spline, and it achieved independent predictor status (p < 0.001). The risk of RCC-SM was lowest among patients younger than 50 years. We observed an increase in RCC-SM until the age of 50, at which point the level of risk reached a plateau. We observed a second increase among patients aged 75-89 years. We found similar patterns when we stratified patients according to the 2002 American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) stages. CONCLUSION: The effect of age shows prognostic significance and indicates that follow-up and possibly secondary treatments might need to be adjusted according to the age of the patient.

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