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Journal ArticleDOI

Bladder preservation multimodality therapy as an alternative to radical cystectomy for treatment of muscle invasive bladder cancer.

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Study Type – Therapy (case series) 
Level of Evidence 4
Abstract
Study Type – Therapy (case series) Level of Evidence 4 What’s known on the subject? and What does the study add? The subject of bladder preservation multimodality protocols in muscle invasive bladder TCC is not new. In our study, even in a highly selected group of patients, multimodality protocol with M-VAC and radiation therapy achieved suboptimal results at 1 year. This emphasized the role of radical cystectomy as the gold standard treatment for invasive bladder TCC. OBJECTIVE • To evaluate the efficacy of a bladder preservation multimodality protocol for patients with operable carcinoma invading bladder muscle. MATERIALS AND METHODS • In this prospective study, we included 33 patients with transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) (T2 and T3, Nx, M0) who were amenable to complete transurethral resection. • These patients refused radical cystectomy as their first treatment option. After maximum transurethral resection of bladder tumour (TURBT), all patients received three cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy in the form of methotrexate, vinblastin, adriamycin and cisplatin (MVAC) followed by radical radiotherapy. • Four weeks later, all cases had radiological and cystoscopical re-evaluation. • Complete responders were considered to be those patients who had no evidence of residual tumour. All patients were subjected to a regular follow-up by cystoscopy and tumour site biopsy conducted every 3 months. Abdomino-pelvic computed tomography and chest X-ray were conducted every 6 months. • The study endpoint was the response to treatment after completion of the first year of follow-up after therapy. RESULTS • Out of 33 eligible patients, a total of 28 patients completed the study treatment protocol. Their mean ± SD age was 56.7 ± 6 years. Trimodal therapy was well tolerated in most of cases, with no severe acute toxicities. After 12 months of follow-up, a complete response was achieved in 39.3% and a partial response in 7.1%, with an overall response rate of 46.4%. • By the end of the first year, disease-free survival was reported in 39.3%, whereas 25% were still alive with their disease, giving an overall survival of 64.3% for all patients who maintained their intact, well functioning bladders. • Tumour stage and completeness of transurethral resection of bladder tumour were the most important predictors of response and survival. T2 lesions had complete and partial response rates of 69.2% and 23%, respectively, whereas T3 lesions had rates of 40% and 13.3%, respectively (P= 0.001). • The response rate in patients who had complete TURBT was 82.6% vs 20% in those with cystoscopic biopsy only (P= 0.001). In addition, disease-free survival was 72.7% in T2 patients and 27.3% in T3 patients (P= 0.001). CONCLUSION • In the present study, bladder preservation protocol with MVAC and radical radiotherapy achieved suboptimal response rates at 1 year in patients with localized TCC invading bladder muscle. Patients with solitary T2 lesions that are amenable to complete TURBT achieved the best response rates. Longer follow-up is needed to verify these results. Patients with localized disease should be encouraged for radical cystectomy, which achieved better results.

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Radical cystectomy vs. chemoradiation in T2-4aN0M0 bladder cancer: a case-control study.

TL;DR: Despite having a significantly higher comorbidity index, patients treated with chemoradiation had similar overall and disease-free survival rates with low toxicity and should be considered in patients with T2-4aN0M0 bladder cancer.
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Bladder preservation in muscle-invasive bladder cancer: a comprehensive review.

TL;DR: A comprehensive literature review of bladder preservation therapies highlights the breadth of strategies that aim to preserve a patient’s bladder while still optimizing local tumor control and overall survival.
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Current clinical practice guidelines on chemotherapy and radiotherapy for the treatment of non-metastatic muscle-invasive urothelial cancer: A systematic review and critical evaluation by the Hellenic Genito-Urinary Cancer Group (HGUCG)

TL;DR: A treatment algorithm, regarding non-surgical therapies for non-metastatic, muscle-invasive urothelial cancer based predominantly on patients' fitness for the available therapeutic modalities, is developed.
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Diagnosis and treatment of bladder cancer: how can we improve?

TL;DR: This review covers the diagnosis and management of bladder cancer, and discusses ways to improve outcomes through increased public awareness, improvements in tumor detection, accurate staging, and regimented patient surveillance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Radical Cystectomy for Bladder Cancer Today--A Homogeneous Series Without Neoadjuvant Therapy

TL;DR: Despite negative preoperative staging, pelvic lymphadenectomy and cystectomy for bladder cancer reveal a high percentage of unsuspected nodal metastases that have a 25% chance for long-term survival.
Journal ArticleDOI

Combined-Modality Treatment and Selective Organ Preservation in Invasive Bladder Cancer: Long-Term Results

TL;DR: TUR with RCT is a reasonable option for patients seeking an alternative to radical cystectomy and Ideal candidates are those with early-stage and unifocal tumors, in whom a complete TUR is accomplished.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biology and Management of Bladder Cancer

TL;DR: The development of new techniques of management appears to be yielding higher rates of response, prolonged disease-free survival, and perhaps even improved rates of survival in bladder cancer patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selective bladder preservation by combined modality protocol treatment: Long-term outcomes of 190 patients with invasive bladder cancer

TL;DR: A trimodality approach with bladder preservation based on the initial tumor response is, therefore, safe, with most long-term survivors retaining functional bladders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Combined radiation and chemotherapy for invasive transitional-cell carcinoma of the bladder: a prospective study.

TL;DR: This neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy combination, easy to implement and well tolerated even in elderly patients, provides a high complete response rate and may prove to be effective in inoperable patients and may be proposed as conservative treatment in patients with a complete response to the initial course of chemoradiation.
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