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Perioperative systemic therapy in muscle invasive bladder cancer: Current standard method, biomarkers and emerging strategies.

Kyung Hwan KimHye Won LeeHong Koo HaHo Kyung Seo
Published in: Investigative and clinical urology (2023)
Bladder cancer ranks as the 10th most common cancer type globally, and muscle-invasive disease accounts for approximately 25% of newly diagnosed bladder cancers. Despite definitive treatment, 50% of patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) develop metastasis within 2 years, leading to death. Perioperative systemic therapy is generally recommended to control local relapse or distant metastasis after surgical resection for patients with MIBC. Cisplatin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by radical cystectomy is the current standard treatment to improve oncologic control and survival outcomes. Adjuvant chemotherapy is recommended for patients with pathological T3-4 or positive lymph nodes after radical cystectomy if no neoadjuvant chemotherapy was given. Nonetheless, perioperative systemic therapy is not applied widely because of its toxicity, and less than 25% of patients receive cisplatin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Therefore, the development of predictive biomarkers for neoadjuvant chemotherapy efficacy and alternative effective regimens for cisplatin-ineligible patients are important. Furthermore, recently, novel anticancer agents such as immune checkpoint inhibitors and antibody-drug conjugates have proven survival benefits in the metastatic setting, thereby expanding their therapeutic applications to the perioperative setting for non-metastatic MIBC. Herein, we discuss the current status and future perspectives of perioperative systemic strategies for MIBC.
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