Plasmacytoid bladder cancer spreads locally along the urothelium, which can be missed on imaging. Clinicians must push for a thorough examination under anesthesia (EUA) before surgery, even if a patient shows a complete radiographic response to therapy.
For bladder cancer patients with micrometastatic disease, the standard cystectomy requires a significant delay for the operation and recovery. This window may allow unseen metastases to progress, suggesting that upfront, effective systemic therapy is more critical for survival than immediate major surgery.
Experts caution that the new consensus definition of cCR, combining imaging and cystoscopy, is for clinical trials only. Applying it prematurely in routine practice could harm patients, as its correlation with true pathologic response is still being validated with modern therapies.
In muscle-invasive bladder cancer, cisplatin ineligibility is frequently due to renal insufficiency caused by large, aggressive tumors obstructing the ureter. This redefines this patient group as having more advanced local disease, rather than simply being unfit for chemotherapy, explaining their poor outcomes with surgery alone.
The trial's 57.1% pathologic complete response (pCR) rate is deceptively conservative. It categorized patients who responded well but declined surgery as non-responders, suggesting the treatment's true biological efficacy is even higher than the already impressive reported figure.
High relapse rates (~70%) in surgery-alone arms of recent trials suggest most patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) already have micrometastatic disease. This reframes the disease, prioritizing early systemic therapy over immediate surgery to achieve control and potential cure.
Historically, aggressive variants like micropapillary went directly to surgery. However, recent data suggests these patients do poorly due to micrometastatic disease. The trend is now to give neoadjuvant EV-Pembro to treat systemic disease, even with limited specific evidence.
Even if a bladder tumor is predominantly a variant histology like squamous, the presence of any urothelial cancer component means it should be treated with the standard urothelial regimen (EV-Pembro). Pure variants without a urothelial element are treated differently.
The success of new treatments like immunotherapy and ADCs leads to more patients achieving a deep response. This high efficacy makes patients question the necessity of a radical cystectomy, a life-altering surgery, creating an urgent need for data-driven, bladder-sparing protocols.
An expert oncologist identified a pathological complete response (pCR) rate over 50% as the benchmark that would fundamentally alter treatment. The EV Pembro trial's 57% pCR rate crossed this threshold, forcing a shift from a surgery-centric model toward bladder preservation strategies and systemic therapy.
While getting an expert pathology opinion is valuable for variant histology, it should not delay treatment if a urothelial component is present. Treatment can begin while the detailed review occurs in parallel, as delays can lead to loss of disease control.