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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2008 May;101(9):1106-10.
doi: 10.1111/j.1464-410X.2007.07224.x. Epub 2007 Sep 20.

Patients' perceived burden of cystoscopic and urinary surveillance of bladder cancer: a randomized comparison

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Patients' perceived burden of cystoscopic and urinary surveillance of bladder cancer: a randomized comparison

Madelon N M van der Aa et al. BJU Int. 2008 May.

Abstract

Objective: To compare, in patients with non-muscle-invasive low-grade (pTa/pT1, G1/G2) urothelial cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder, the perceived burden of flexible cystoscopy or surveillance by microsatellite analysis (MA) in voided urine, as such patients are normally recommended to adhere to regular cysto-urethroscopic surveillance (CUS).

Patients and methods: In all, 220 participants of a randomized trial comparing CUS and surveillance by MA were asked to complete questionnaires 1 week after cystoscopy or urine sample collection. We assessed the discomfort and pain reported during CUS, experiences with MA, and physical symptoms, medical consumption and general functioning in the week after CUS/urine sampling.

Results: We analysed data from 732 questionnaires (197 patients) completed after CUS and 184 (67 patients) after collecting urine. The introduction of the cystoscope was reported to cause discomfort in 39% and pain in 35% of the responses to the questionnaires; the waiting time for the results of MA was reported as burdensome in 19%. Painful micturition was significantly more frequent in the week after CUS than after MA (30% and 12%, respectively). The frequency of fever (1% and 2%) and haematuria (7% and 6%) was similar in both groups. Older patients reported significantly less pain and discomfort from cystoscopy, and this was not related to having more previous cystoscopies.

Conclusion: CUS caused pain and discomfort in about a third of patients. The burden of MA appeared fully attributable to the waiting time for the test result. The present results are a further motivation in the search for less invasive surveillance tests.

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