Rouprêt M., Colin P., Xylinas E., Compérat E., Dubosq F., Houédé N., Larré S., Masson-Lecomte A., Neuzillet Y., Pignot G., Puech P., Roumiguié M., Méjean A.   [CCAFU french national guidelines 2016-2018 on upper tract tumors].  Prog. Urol..  2016 ;27 Suppl 1 :S55-S66
Thomas P. A., Falcoz P. E., Bernard A., Le Pimpec-Barthes F., Jougon J., Brouchet L., Massard G., Dahan M., Loundou A.   Bilobectomy for lung cancer: contemporary national early morbidity and mortality outcomes.  Eur. J. Cardio-Thorac. Surg..  2016 ;49 :e38-e43

OBJECTIVES: To determine contemporary early outcomes associated with bilobectomy for lung cancer and to identify their predictors using a nationally representative general thoracic surgery database. METHODS: A total of 1831 patients, who underwent elective bilobectomy for primary lung cancer between 1 January 2004 and 31 December 2013, were selected. Logistic regression analysis was performed on variables for major adverse events. RESULTS: There were 670 upper and 1161 lower bilobectomies. Video-assisted thoracic surgery was seldom performed (2%). Induction therapy and extended resection were performed in 293 (16%) and 279 patients (15.2%), respectively. Operative mortality was 4.8% (upper: 4.5%/lower: 5%; P = 0.62), and significantly higher following extended procedures when compared with standard bilobectomy (4.3 vs 7.5%; P = 0.013). Pulmonary complication rate was 21.1%. Bronchial fistula occurred in 46 patients (2.5%) and pleural space complications in 296 (16.2%). Their respective incidence rates were significantly higher following lower than upper bilobectomy (3.5 vs 0.7%; P < 0.001 and 17.8 vs 13.3%; P = 0.007). At multivariate analysis, extended procedures [odds ratio (OR), 2.3; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.03-5.31; P = 0.04], ASA scores of 3 or greater (OR, 2.02; 95% CI, 1.33-3.07; P < 0.001) and World Health Organization performance status 2 or greater (OR, 1.47; 95% CI, 1.01-2.13; P = 0.04) were risk predictors of mortality. Female gender (OR, 0.39; 95% CI, 0.19-0.80; P = 0.01), highest body mass index (BMI) values (OR, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.86-0.96; P = 0.001) and recent years of surgery (OR, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.84-0.99; P = 0.02) were protective. Predictors of bronchial fistula were male gender, lowest BMI values, lower bilobectomy and longest operative times. Male gender, lowest BMI values and longest operative times were also predictors of pulmonary complications, together with highest ASA scores and lowest forced expiratory volume in 1 s values. CONCLUSIONS: Risks related to lower bilobectomy lie halfway between those reported for lobectomy and pneumonectomy. Additional surgical measures to prevent pleural space complications and bronchial fistula should be encouraged with this operation. In contrast, upper bilobectomy shares more or less the same hazards as lobectomy.

Aboukais R., Estrade L., Devos P., Blond S., Lejeune J. P., Reyns N.   Gamma Knife Radiosurgery of Brainstem Cavernous Malformations.  Stereotact. Funct. Neurosurg..  2016 ;94 :397-403

BACKGROUND/AIMS: Our study aimed to evaluate the efficiency and morbidity of Gamma Knife radiosurgery (GKS) in the treatment of hemorrhagic brainstem cavernous malformations (CMs). METHODS: We included in this study all patients who underwent GKS for the treatment of a hemorrhagic brainstem CM(s) in our institution between January 2007 and December 2012. The GKS was privileged when the surgical procedure was evaluated as very risky. The mean dose of radiation was 14.8 Gy, and the mean target volume was 0.282 cm3. All patients participated in a scheduled clinical follow-up. The posttreatment MRI was performed after 6 months and after 1 year, and then all patients had an annual MRI follow-up. RESULTS: There were 19 patients with a mean age of 36.7 years. The mean follow-up period was 51.2 months. The annual hemorrhage rate (AHR) was 27.31% before GKS, 2.46% during the first 2 years following the GKS, and 2.46% after the first 2 years following the GKS. The decrease in AHR after GKS was significant (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: GKS should be suggested when the surgical procedure harbors a high risk of neurological morbidity in patients with brainstem CM. Compared to prior literature results, a lower dose than applied in this study could be discussed.

Ouldamer L., Bendifallah S., Body G., Touboul C., Graesslin O., Raimond E., Collinet P., Coutant C., Lavoué V., Lévêque J., Daraï E., Ballester M.   Predicting poor prognosis recurrence in women with endometrial cancer: a nomogram developed by the FRANCOGYN study group.  Br. J. Cancer.  2016 ;115 :1296-1303

BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to develop a nomogram to predict 'poor prognosis recurrence' (PPR) in women treated for endometrial cancer (EC). METHODS: The data of 861 women who received primary surgical treatment between January 2001 and December 2013 were abstracted from a prospective multicenter database. Data were randomly split into two sets: training and validation with a predefined 2/3 ratio. A Cox proportional hazards multivariate model of selected prognostic features was performed in the training cohort (n=574) to develop a nomogram predicting PPRs. The nomogram was validated in the validation cohort of 287 patients. RESULTS: In the training cohort, 82 (14.3%) developed subsequent PPR. Age, histologic type and grade, lymphovascular space invasion status, FIGO stage, and nodal staging (SLN+/-pelvic and/or para-aortic lymphadenectomy) were independently associated with subsequent PPR. The nomogram showed an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.82 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.73-0.89) in the training set. The validation set showed a good discrimination with an AUC of 0.75 (95% CI, 0.65-0.83). CONCLUSIONS: We have developed a robust tool that is able to predict subsequent PPRs in women with FIGO I-III EC.

Tay K. J., Villers A., Polascik T. J.   Targeted Anterior Gland Focal Therapy-a Novel Treatment Option for a Better Defined Disease.  Curr. Urol. Rep..  2016 ;17 :69

The goal of focal therapy is to achieve long-term oncological control by eradicating only the clinically significant focus/foci of cancer within the prostate, while preserving erectile function and continence. Anterior prostate cancers may have a PZ or TZ origin and share commonalities in location and biology. While anterior prostate cancers previously constituted a diagnostic blind spot in the prostate and were often not detected or discovered late, with the rapid dissemination of advanced imaging and biopsy techniques, they can now be identified at an earlier, organ-confined stage due to MR imaging and targeted biopsies. Due to their anterior location, they represent a therapeutic target that allows for thorough ablation of the cancer focus/foci with an adequate margin while remaining far from the neurovascular bundles bilaterally. However, the TZ origin cancers are mostly anterior to the distal urethra close to the apex and the striated sphincter. Men having early stage anterior cancers may represent good candidates to achieve a balance between oncological control and functional preservation with focal therapy. Thus, this class of tumor based on location, along with the proposed treatment, represents a novel form of targeted image-guided therapy.

Kunstfeld R., Hauschild A., Basset-Seguin N., Hansson J., Dreno B., Mortier L., Ascierto P., Licitra L., Dimier N., Xynos I., Grob J. J.   Development of muscle spasm during Vismodegib treatment and the effect of treatment interruptions: exploratory analyses from the STEVIE study.  Melanoma Res..  2016 ;26 :E78-E79
le Carpentier M., Merlot B., Bot Robin V., Rubod C., Collinet P.   Partial cystectomy for bladder endometriosis: Robotic assisted laparoscopy versus standard laparoscopy.  Gynecol. Obstet. Fertil..  2016 ;44 :315-321

OBJECTIVES: To compare robot-assisted laparoscopy (RL) and conventional laparoscopy (CL) in surgery for bladder endometriosis. METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted between January 2007 and December 2013, including patients with bladder endometriosis receiving at least a partial cystectomy by RL or CL. The primary endpoint was the presence of a radiological recurrence at bladder level. RESULTS: We included 15 patients in the RL group and 22 in the CL group. The median age was 29 years+/-7 years. The symptoms were similar in the 2 groups. Pre-surgical mapping of the lesions was carried out with MRI. Sixty percent of patients in the RL group vs 91% in the CL group had other associated endometriosis lesions, P=0.04. The median size of the bladder lesion was 30+/-8mm in the RL group vs 23+/-7mm in the CL group, P=0.03. The median operative time was 210 vs 225min, P=0.8. We did not find any significant difference in intraoperative and early and late postoperative complications between the 2 groups. The median length of stay was 5 days vs 6 days. The proportion of relapse was 20 vs 23%, P>0.05. Clinical improvement was similar between the groups, i.e. 93 vs 86%, P=0.6 and the pregnancy rate was 93 vs 86%, P=0.6. CONCLUSIONS: Robot-assisted laparoscopy in the surgical treatment of bladder endometriosis as compared to traditional laparoscopy does not seem to have an adverse effect neither on the risk of recurrence nor on the occurrence of intra- and postoperative complications.

Prasivoravong J., Barbotin A. L., Derveaux A., Leroy C., Leroy X., Puech P., Mitchell V., Marcelli F., Rigot J. M.   Leydig cell tumor of the testis with azoospermia and elevated delta4 androstenedione: case report.  Basic Clin Androl.  2016 ;26 :14

BACKGROUND: Secreting interstitial cell (Leydig cell) tumors are rare. In adults, the clinical picture and steroid levels are variable. CASE PRESENTATION: This paper presents a case of left testicular tumor, showing azoospermia with normal serum level of total testosterone, collapsed FSH and LH, and high delta4 androstenedione. Histopathological investigation revealed a Leydig cell tumor. TESE allowed spermatozoa extraction and freezing. Testicular histology found hypospermatogenesis and germ-cell aplasia with interstitial fibrosis. Surgical resection of the tumor resulted in normalization of gonadotropins and fall in serum delta4 androstenedione to subnormal levels in the postoperative period confirming that the tumor was secreting delta4 androstenedione. It was hypothesized that high delta4 androstenedione resulted in intra tumoral 17 beta-HSD overtaken by delta4 androstenedione or that 17 beta-HSD activity in the tumor was different from that of normal Leydig cells. Three months after surgery sperm analysis found a complete recovery of spermatogenesis. A spontaneous pregnancy occurred 3 months after surgery and a girl was born. CONCLUSIONS: In this case, the diagnosis of testicular Leydig cell tumor secreting delta4 androstenedione was made in a context of azoospermia.

Kantola E., Rantamaki A., Leino I., Penttinen J. P., Mordon S., Guina M.   5 W YELLOW-ORANGE COMPACT SEMICONDUCTOR LASER FOR THE TREATMENT OF VASCULAR LESIONS.  Lasers Surg. Med..  2016 ;48 :11-11
Cordoba A., Escande A., Lopez S., Mortier L., Mirabel X., Coche-Déqueant B., Lartigau E.   Low-dose brachytherapy for early stage penile cancer: a 20-year single-institution study (73 patients).  Radiat. Oncol..  2016 ;11 :96

PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study is to analyze the results of exclusive interstitial brachytherapy (IBT) as a conservative approach in the treatment of penile cancer confined to the glans or the shaft with long-term follow-up in a single institution. MATERIALS/METHODS: Between July 1992 and November 2013, 73 consecutive patients with non-metastatic invasive penile cancer were treated by Low dose rate (LDR) IBT in our institution. The localization of the primary lesion was glands in 67 patients (91.8 %) and shaft in 6 patients (8.2 %). All 73 patients presented with squamous cell carcinoma with grades of differentiation as follows: 34 patients with grade 1 (44.7 %), 9 patients with grade 2 (11.8 %), 9 patients with grade 3 (11.8 %) and 21 patients unknown (28.8 %). Six patients (7.8 %) presented with in situ carcinoma, 55 patients (75,3 %) presented with T1, 11 patients (15 %) presented with T2, and one patient (1.3 %) presented with Tx. Inguinal nodal dissection was performed in 29 patients (38.2 %); 13 patients (17.8 %) presented with histologically confirmed positive ganglion. After circumcision, IBT was performed using a hypodermic needle. The median dose delivered was 60 Gy (range, 40 to 70 Gy). The median activity of the iridium-192 wire was 1.12 mCi/cm, and the median reference isodose rate was 0.4 Gy/h (range, 0.2-1.2). Patients with histological inguinal metastases received external beam radiotherapy to the selected inguinal affected area with a median dose of 45 Gy (30-55 Gy). RESULTS: The median follow-up time was 51.8 months (range 34.4 to 68.7). The 5-year overall survival was 82.0 %, with eight deaths from cancer and five non-cancer-related deaths. Disease-specific survival was 91.4 %, relapse-free survival was 64.4 %, and local relapse-free survival as 74 %. Total or partial penile preservation was 87.9 % at 5-years. Complications rates at 5 years were 6.6 % urethral stenosis (five patients), two patients (2.6 %) with pain related to sexual intercourse and four patients (5.3 %) with dysuria grade 2. Five patients (6.8 %) required penile amputation for necrosis. CONCLUSIONS: IBT provides good local control with organ preservation, excellent tolerance and low complication rates in early-stage penile cancers.