TREATMENT STRATEGIES USING TRANSURETHRAL SURGERY, CHEMOTHERAPY, AND RADIATION-THERAPY WITH SELECTION THAT SAFELY ALLOWS BLADDER CONSERVATION FOR INVASIVE BLADDER-CANCER
Ke. Kanady et al., TREATMENT STRATEGIES USING TRANSURETHRAL SURGERY, CHEMOTHERAPY, AND RADIATION-THERAPY WITH SELECTION THAT SAFELY ALLOWS BLADDER CONSERVATION FOR INVASIVE BLADDER-CANCER, Seminars in surgical oncology, 13(5), 1997, pp. 359-364
Combined modality therapy with the goal of effecting cure and achievin
g organ preservation has become the standard oncological approach in m
any malignancies. Although radical cystectomy has been considered the
standard treatment for invasive carcinoma of the bladder, equivalent r
esults have been achieved using combined modality treatment in selecte
d patients, particularly those with T2 and T3a disease without obstruc
ted ureters. Effective combined modality treatment consists of three t
reatment modalities: (1) transurethral resection of the bladder tumor
(TURBT), followed by concurrent (2) chemotherapy, and (3) radiation. F
ollowing induction therapy, histologic response is evaluated by cystos
copy and biopsy. Clinical complete responders continue with concurrent
chemotherapy and irradiation. Those patients not achieving a clinical
complete response are advised to undergo cystectomy. Individually the
local monotherapies of radiation, TURBT, or systemic chemotherapy eac
h achieve a local control rate of 20% to 40%. When they are combined,
complete response rates of 70-80% are achieved and 85% of these will r
emain free of invasive recurrence in the bladder. Bladder preservation
trials using combined modality treatment approaches with selection fo
r organ conservation by response to initial treatment report an overal
l 5-year survival rate of approximately 50%, and they have achieved a
40% to 35% 5-year survival rate with the bladder intact. Modern multi-
modality bladder preservation approaches offer survival rates similar
to radical cystectomy, for patients of similar clinical stage and age,
and an improved quality of life by allowing a majority of patients to
retain their own fully functional bladder. Bladder conservation thera
py may be offered to selected patients with bladder cancer as one alte
rnative to radical cystectomy and its use should be by experienced mul
ti-modality teams of Urologic oncologists. (C) 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.