| Literature DB >> 35347572 |
Begoña P Valderrama1, Aránzazu González-Del-Alba2, Rafael Morales-Barrera3, Ignacio Peláez Fernández4, Sergio Vázquez5, Cristina Caballero Díaz6, Montserrat Domènech7, Ovidio Fernández Calvo8, Alfonso Gómez de Liaño Lista9, José Ángel Arranz Arija10.
Abstract
Most muscle-invasive bladder cancer (BC) are urothelial carcinomas (UC) of transitional origin, although histological variants of UC have been recognized. Smoking is the most important risk factor in developed countries, and the basis for prevention. UC harbors high number of genomic aberrations that make possible targeted therapies. Based on molecular features, a consensus classification identified six different MIBC subtypes. Hematuria and irritative bladder symptoms, CT scan, cystoscopy and transurethral resection are the basis for diagnosis. Radical cystectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy is the standard approach for muscle-invasive BC, although bladder preservation is an option for selected patients who wish to avoid or cannot tolerate surgery. Perioperative cisplatin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy is recommended for cT2-4aN0M0 tumors, or as adjuvant in patients with pT3/4 and or pN + after radical cystectomy. Follow-up is particularly important after the availability of new salvage therapies. It should be individualized and adapted to the risk of recurrence. Cisplatin-gemcitabine is considered the standard first line for metastatic tumors. Carboplatin should replace cisplatin in cisplatin-ineligible patients. According to the EMA label, pembrolizumab or atezolizumab could be an option in cisplatin-ineligible patients with high PD-L1 expression. For patients whose disease respond or did not progress after first-line platinum chemotherapy, maintenance with avelumab prolongs survival with respect to the best supportive care. Pembrolizumab also increases survival versus vinflunine or taxanes in patients with progression after chemotherapy who have not received avelumab, as well as enfortumab vedotin in those progressing to first-line chemotherapy followed by an antiPDL1/PD1. Erdafitinib may be considered in this setting in patients with FGFR alterations. An early onset of supportive and palliative care is always strongly recommended.Entities:
Keywords: Bladder cancer; Muscle-invasive; Urothelial
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35347572 PMCID: PMC8986688 DOI: 10.1007/s12094-022-02815-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Oncol ISSN: 1699-048X Impact factor: 3.405
Levels of evidence/ grades of recommendation
| Levels of evidence |
| (I) Evidence from at least one large randomized, controlled trial of good methodological quality (low potential for bias) or meta-analyses of well-conducted randomized trials without heterogeneity |
| (II) Small randomized trials or large randomized trials with a suspicion of bias (lower methodological quality) or meta-analyses of such trials or of trials with demonstrated heterogeneity |
| (III) Prospective cohort studies |
| (IV) Retrospective cohort studies or case–control studies |
| (V) Studies without control group, case reports, expert opinions Grades of recommendation |
| Grades of recommendation |
| (A) Strong evidence of efficacy with a substantial clinical benefit; strongly recommended |
| (B) Strong or moderate evidence of efficacy but having limited clinical benefit; generally recommended |
| (C) Insufficient evidence of efficacy or benefit; does not outweigh risk or disadvantages; optional |
| (D) Moderate evidence against efficacy or of adverse outcome; generally not recommended |
| (E) Strong evidence against efficacy or of adverse outcome; never recommended |
TNM staging system for urothelial carcinoma of the bladder
| T—Primary Tumour | |
|---|---|
| Tx | Primary tumour cannot be assessed |
| T0 | No evidence of primary tumour |
| Ta | Non-invasive papillary carcinoma |
| Tis | Carcinoma in situ: “flat tumour” |
| T1 | Tumour invades subepithelial connective tissue |
| T2 | Tumour invades muscle |
| T2a | Tumour invades superficial muscle (inner half) |
| T2b | Tumour invades deep muscle (outer half) |
| T3 | Tumour invades perivesical tissue: |
| T3a | microscopically |
| T3b | macroscopically (extravesical mass) |
| T4 | Tumour invades any of the following: prostate stroma, seminal vesicles, uterus, vagina, pelvic wall, abdominal wall |
| T4a | Tumour invades prostate stroma, seminal vesicles, uterus, or vagina |
| T4b | Tumour invades pelvic wall or abdominal wall |
SOGUG-SEOM Recommendations for localized muscle-invasive and advanced urothelial bladder cancer
| LE; GoR | |
|---|---|
| Locoregional disease | |
| Radical cystectomy | |
| RC with pelvic LND is the standard treatment of MIBC cT2-T4aN0M0 | IA |
Removal of at least ten lymph nodes is recommended for a correct evaluation of lymph node status | IVA |
| Bladder preservation strategies | |
| In experienced centers a TMT bladder-preserving therapy for MIBC is a reasonable alternative to cystectomy for selected patients who wish to avoid or do not tolerate radical cystectomy | IIB |
| Radiosensitizing regimens as cisplatin or the combination of 5-FU plus mitomycin C are generally recommended | IIB |
| Other regimens as cisplatin plus 5-FU, cisplatin plus paclitaxel and low-dose gemcitabine are established alternatives | IIB |
| Other approaches such as TURBT alone, TURBT followed by chemotherapy or TURBT followed by RT are options for patients who cannot tolerate TMT | IIB |
| Neoadjuvant treatment | |
| Neoadjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy is recommended for patients with T2-4a bladder cancer | IA |
| Adjuvant treatment | |
| Adjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy is recommended in patients with pT3/4 and or pN + disease after RC if no neoadjuvant chemotherapy has been given and who have no contraindication for cisplatin | IA |
| Follow-up | |
| Follow-up after MIBC should be individualized and adapted to the risk of recurrence. Urine cytology and a CT scan should be done every 3–6 months for at least 3 years, and annually thereafter, with urethral washing and cystoscopy in selected cases | VA |
| Advanced/metastastic disease | |
| First-line systemic treatment | |
| Cisplatin-based chemotherapy is considered the standard option for first-line metastatic UC. CG is preferred over MVAC and ddMVAC due to its better safety profile | IA |
| For unfit patients, GCa should be the preferred first-line treatment option | IA |
| According to the EMA label, pembrolizumab or atezolizumab could be an option in cisplatin ineligible patients with high PD-L1 expression levels | IIIB |
| Immune checkpoint inhibitors and chemotherapy as maintenance or second-line | |
| Maintenance therapy with avelumab is the standard of care for patients whose disease respond or did not progress after four to six cycles of first-line platinum-based chemotherapy (CG or CaG) | IA |
| After progression to a first-line platinum-based therapy, PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors are standard options | |
| Pembrolizumab | IA |
| Atezolizumab | IIIB |
| Treatment with vinflunine is an alternative for patients in whom anti PD-1/PD-L1 therapy is not possible | IIB |
| Treatment after failure to chemotherapy and immune checkpoint inhibitors | |
| For patients progressing after platinum-containing chemotherapy and CPI, enfortumab-vedotin is recommended as standard treatment | IA |
| For patients progressing after platinum-containing chemotherapy with or without previous CPI, with tumor harboring FGFR mutations or fusions, erdafitinib could be considered | IIIB |
| Early supportive care is strongly recommended | VA |
LE level of evidence; GoR grade of recommendation. RC radical cystectomy. 5FU 5-fluorouracil. LND lymphadenectomy. MIBC muscle-invasive bladder cancer. TMT Trimodal therapy. TURBT transurethral resection of bladder tumor. CG Cisplatin-Gemcitabin. CaG carboplatin-Gemcitabine. PD-1/PD-L1 Programmed Death-1/ Programmed Death-ligand 1. CPI check-point inhibitors. FGFR fibroblast growth factor receptor