Neo-adjuvant chemotherapy in invasive bladder cancer.
Review
Overview
abstract
In patients with locally advanced muscle-invasive bladder cancer, neo-adjuvant chemotherapy was designed to treat micrometastatic disease present in up to 50% of patients at the time of diagnosis. Early chemotherapy has been combined with local therapy based on the reasoning that treatment of small volume disease would result in a better outcome. Another reason for giving neo-adjuvant chemotherapy is in an attempt to save the bladder. In selected patients, bladder preservation can be achieved with the use of chemotherapy plus radiotherapy, partial cystectomy, or transurethral resection of the bladder (TURB). Neo-adjuvant chemotherapy and bladder preservation remain controversial topics, as radical cystectomy is still considered to be the gold standard of treatment for muscle-invasive bladder cancer. The true success of bladder-preserving treatment by chemotherapy with or without RT will require validation in prospective randomized trials.