Role of adjuvant chemotherapy in the treatment of invasive carcinoma of the urinary bladder

Citation:

Dimopoulos MA, Moulopoulos LA. Role of adjuvant chemotherapy in the treatment of invasive carcinoma of the urinary bladder. Journal of Clinical Oncology [Internet]. 1998;16(4):1601 - 1612.

Abstract:

Purpose: The standard treatment for patients with muscle-invasive carcinoma of the urinary bladder is radical cystectomy. While radical cystectomy cures many patients with this tumor, almost 50% of them will develop metastatic disease. Adjuvant chemotherapy has been proposed for these patients in an attempt to reduce the probability of relapse and to improve survival. To assess whether adjuvant chemotherapy does benefit patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer, we reviewed all phase II and III studies published in the English literature over the last 20 years. Methods: A review of all published reports was facilitated by the use of Medline computer search and by manual search of the Index Medicus. Results: Several comparative, nonrandomized studies have indicated that adjuvant chemotherapy may prolong disease-free survival. Four randomized studies have been conducted and all had a suboptimal patient accrual. Three studies used a cisplatin-containing combination chemotherapy and included primarily patients with non-organ-confined transitional-cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder. All three studies indicated that adjuvant chemotherapy improve disease-free survival and two of them also showed improvement in event-free survival and overall survival, respectively. Conclusion: Published series have been unable to establish an undisputed benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy over radical cystectomy alone for muscle-invasive bladder cancer. The interpretation of the available data is compromised by several methodologic and statistical problems. Thus, adjuvant chemotherapy cannot be considered as a standard treatment for all patients with muscle-invasive carcinoma of the bladder. Well-designed prospective randomized studies are needed to clarify the rob of adjuvant chemotherapy in this disease. However, outside a protocol setting, there is some evidence that patients with extravesical disease or with lymph node involvement may benefit from adjuvant treatment with cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy. No data support such an approach for patients with muscle-invasive but organ-confined bladder cancer.

Notes:

Cited By :31Export Date: 21 February 2017

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