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While new systemic agents dominate MIBC discussions, chemo-radiation remains a critical treatment, especially for patients unsuitable for radical cystectomy due to age or comorbidities. For these individuals, it offers a potentially curative, bladder-preserving alternative that avoids the high risks and sequelae of major surgery.
Following high response rates to systemic therapies like EV Pembro, using radiation for bladder preservation is now questioned. It may constitute overtreatment by radiating a now cancer-free organ, while providing no benefit for the systemic micrometastases that are the primary driver of mortality.
Upcoming trials like RETAIN and IMVigor011 are using circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) to guide complex treatment choices in muscle-invasive bladder cancer. This biomarker-driven approach aims to personalize therapy, potentially enabling bladder preservation for some patients and identifying others who need additional adjuvant treatment.
Historically, bladder-sparing options were primarily for patients unfit for radical cystectomy. Now, with advances in surgical techniques and perioperative care, fewer patients are deemed truly ineligible for surgery. This shift means new bladder-sparing strategies are being developed for a much broader patient population.
The chemoradiation control arm in SUNRISE 2 performed so well (e.g., 95% 1-year overall survival) that it challenges the long-held belief that surgery is unequivocally superior. This result, alongside other recent studies, suggests chemoradiation should be considered a potent standard-of-care contender for bladder preservation in appropriately selected patients.
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.
Experts suggest urinary tumor DNA (utDNA) may better reflect local disease in the bladder, while circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) indicates systemic disease. Using both tests in parallel could provide a more complete picture, with dual-negative results potentially becoming a key criterion for safely pursuing bladder-sparing approaches.
Expert consensus shows a major paradigm shift: perioperative systemic therapy (like EV-Pembro, scoring 2.9) is the undisputed standard for muscle-invasive bladder cancer. Approaches starting with cystectomy alone now score below 1.8, formally branding them as inferior options.
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.
With pathologic complete response rates approaching 67% in patients completing neoadjuvant EV-Pembro, a majority of cystectomies are now removing cancer-free bladders. This creates an ethical and clinical imperative to rapidly launch prospective trials to validate bladder preservation strategies and avoid overtreatment.
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.