Radical cystectomy, or complete bladder removal, remains the standard and most effective surgery for muscle‑invasive bladder ...
Dr Thomas Flaig from the University of Colorado Anschutz discusses a paradigm shift in treating urothelial carcinoma patients ...
Dr. Daniel P. Petrylak discusses the different types of bladder cancer and how treatment options may vary based on disease stage and type. Strategies for the treatment of bladder cancer may vary by ...
Chemotherapy uses medicines to kill fast-growing cells (like cancer cells) or to keep them from dividing (which is how cancers grow). It is a systemic treatment. This means the medicines will travel ...
Conditional approval of intravesical gene therapy was supported by clinical evidence showing a 53.4% complete response rate in patients with treatment-resistant non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer.
Most people with bladder cancer begin treatment by having surgery to remove their cancer. If bladder cancer has spread beyond your bladder, you might have chemotherapy first. This can help treat ...
or on the link below. Non–muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) comprises 75% of newly diagnosed bladder cancer and poses significant clinical challenges because of high recurrence and progression ...
Although bladder cancer ranks as the sixth most common cancer in the United States, with approximately 85,000 new cases diagnosed each year, it continues to receive limited awareness, advocacy, and ...
Muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) is an aggressive disease, with substantial recurrence risk after radical cystectomy and pelvic lymph node dissection alone. In cisplatin-eligible patients, ...