Navigating bladder preservation in Bacillus Calmette-Guérin-unresponsive disease: how much risk is too much?
TL;DR
Bladder preservation in BCG-unresponsive NMIBC should be framed as a preference-sensitive decision that integrates individual progression risk, feasibility of delayed cystectomy, and patient-valued functional outcomes.
OpenAlex 토픽 ·
Bladder and Urothelial Cancer Treatments
Immune responses and vaccinations
Pediatric Urology and Nephrology Studies
Bladder preservation in BCG-unresponsive NMIBC should be framed as a preference-sensitive decision that integrates individual progression risk, feasibility of delayed cystectomy, and patient-valued fu
APA
Alfredo Javier Collado Aliaga, Cristóbal Ávila, Mario I Fernandez (2026). Navigating bladder preservation in Bacillus Calmette-Guérin-unresponsive disease: how much risk is too much?. Current opinion in urology, 36(3), 235-243. https://doi.org/10.1097/MOU.0000000000001371
MLA
Alfredo Javier Collado Aliaga, et al.. "Navigating bladder preservation in Bacillus Calmette-Guérin-unresponsive disease: how much risk is too much?." Current opinion in urology, vol. 36, no. 3, 2026, pp. 235-243.
PMID
41733191
Abstract
[PURPOSE OF REVIEW] Management of Bacillus Calmette-Guérin-unresponsive non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (BCG-unresponsive NMIBC) is rapidly evolving, with an expanding range of bladder-sparing therapies challenging the traditional paradigm of early radical cystectomy. This review is timely given the growing need to balance oncologic safety with quality-of-life considerations in patients who are unfit for or unwilling to undergo cystectomy.
[RECENT FINDINGS] Recent studies have demonstrated clinically meaningful response rates with several bladder-sparing strategies, including intravesical chemotherapy combinations, gene therapy, immune-modulating agents, and systemic immunotherapy. Although durability varies and cross-trial comparisons are limited, emerging data suggest that, in carefully selected patients, an initial bladder-sparing approach followed by timely salvage cystectomy - if required - may achieve oncologic outcomes comparable to upfront cystectomy, provided progression to muscle-invasive disease is avoided.
[SUMMARY] Bladder preservation in BCG-unresponsive NMIBC should be framed as a preference-sensitive decision that integrates individual progression risk, feasibility of delayed cystectomy, and patient-valued functional outcomes. Rather than a fixed threshold, acceptable oncologic risk represents a negotiated balance, with the urologist acting as a navigator who defines safety boundaries while supporting informed, patient-centered decision-making.
[RECENT FINDINGS] Recent studies have demonstrated clinically meaningful response rates with several bladder-sparing strategies, including intravesical chemotherapy combinations, gene therapy, immune-modulating agents, and systemic immunotherapy. Although durability varies and cross-trial comparisons are limited, emerging data suggest that, in carefully selected patients, an initial bladder-sparing approach followed by timely salvage cystectomy - if required - may achieve oncologic outcomes comparable to upfront cystectomy, provided progression to muscle-invasive disease is avoided.
[SUMMARY] Bladder preservation in BCG-unresponsive NMIBC should be framed as a preference-sensitive decision that integrates individual progression risk, feasibility of delayed cystectomy, and patient-valued functional outcomes. Rather than a fixed threshold, acceptable oncologic risk represents a negotiated balance, with the urologist acting as a navigator who defines safety boundaries while supporting informed, patient-centered decision-making.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Urinary Bladder Neoplasms; BCG Vaccine; Cystectomy; Organ Sparing Treatments; Administration, Intravesical; Quality of Life; Risk Assessment; Salvage Therapy; Treatment Outcome; Urinary Bladder; Patient Selection; Disease Progression; Clinical Decision-Making; Adjuvants, Immunologic