Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors as a Neoadjuvant/Adjuvant Treatment of Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer: A Systematic Review.
Biagio BaroneArmando CalogeroLuca ScafuriMatteo FerroGiuseppe LucarelliErika Di ZazzoGiovanni PaganoAlfonso FalconeLorenzo RomanoLuigi De LucaFrancesco OlivaBenito Fabio MirtoFederico CaponeCiro ImbimboFelice CrocettoPublished in: Cancers (2022)
Bladder cancer is the ninth most common cancer worldwide. Over 75% of non-muscle invasive cancer patients require conservative local treatment, while the remaining 25% of patients undergo radical cystectomy or radiotherapy. Immune checkpoint inhibitors represent a novel class of immunotherapy drugs that restore natural antitumoral immune activity via the blockage of inhibitory receptors and ligands expressed on antigen-presenting cells, T lymphocytes and tumour cells. The use of immune checkpoint inhibitors in bladder cancer has been expanded from the neoadjuvant setting, i.e., after radical cystectomy, to the adjuvant setting, i.e., before the operative time or chemotherapy, in order to improve the overall survival and to reduce the morbidity and mortality of both the disease and its treatment. However, some patients do not respond to checkpoint inhibitors. As result, the capability for identifying patients that are eligible for this immunotherapy represent one of the efforts of ongoing studies. The aim of this systematic review is to summarize the most recent evidence regarding the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors, in a neoadjuvant and adjuvant setting, in the treatment of muscle-invasive bladder cancer.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- systematic review
- muscle invasive bladder cancer
- early stage
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- locally advanced
- peritoneal dialysis
- rectal cancer
- prognostic factors
- lymph node
- randomized controlled trial
- radiation therapy
- dna damage
- patient reported outcomes
- combination therapy
- cell proliferation
- meta analyses
- drug induced
- replacement therapy
- smoking cessation
- free survival