Treatment Option Overview
Prolonged survival in most patients with superficial cancers is achieved by
transurethral resection (TUR) with or without intravesical chemotherapy.
Cure is not possible for the majority of patients with deeply invasive
tumors and for most patients with regional or distant metastases. In North
America, the standard treatment of patients with invasive bladder cancers is
radical cystectomy and urinary diversion. Other treatment approaches include
TUR and segmental resection with or without radiation therapy, combined
chemotherapy-radiation therapy, or either followed by salvage cystectomy, when
needed, for local failure. Many newly diagnosed bladder cancer
patients are candidates for participation in a clinical trial. Clinical trials
include studies of chemoprevention of superficial disease, adjuvant
chemotherapy for advanced local or regional disease, preservation of bladder
function with chemotherapy-radiation therapy, and development of more effective
systemic therapy and methods of palliation for metastatic tumors.[1-6]
Reconstructive techniques that fashion low-pressure storage reservoirs from the
reconfigured small and large bowel eliminate the need for external drainage
devices and, in some male patients, allow voiding per urethra. These
techniques are designed to improve the quality of life for patients who require
cystectomy.[7]
References
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Thrasher JB, Crawford ED: Current management of invasive and metastatic transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder. J Urol 149 (5): 957-72, 1993.
[PUBMED Abstract]
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Housset M, Maulard C, Chretien Y, et al.: Combined radiation and chemotherapy for invasive transitional-cell carcinoma of the bladder: a prospective study. J Clin Oncol 11 (11): 2150-7, 1993.
[PUBMED Abstract]
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Kachnic LA, Kaufman DS, Heney NM, et al.: Bladder preservation by combined modality therapy for invasive bladder cancer. J Clin Oncol 15 (3): 1022-9, 1997.
[PUBMED Abstract]
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Lamm DL, Riggs DR, Shriver JS, et al.: Megadose vitamins in bladder cancer: a double-blind clinical trial. J Urol 151 (1): 21-6, 1994.
[PUBMED Abstract]
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Raghavan D, Huben R: Management of bladder cancer. Curr Probl Cancer 19 (1): 1-64, 1995 Jan-Feb.
[PUBMED Abstract]
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Sauer R, Birkenhake S, Kühn R, et al.: Efficacy of radiochemotherapy with platin derivatives compared to radiotherapy alone in organ-sparing treatment of bladder cancer. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 40 (1): 121-7, 1998.
[PUBMED Abstract]
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Hautmann RE, Miller K, Steiner U, et al.: The ileal neobladder: 6 years of experience with more than 200 patients. J Urol 150 (1): 40-5, 1993.
[PUBMED Abstract]
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