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Patients with Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer with Nonluminal Subtype Derive Greatest Benefit from Platinum Based Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy

Authors :
Marc A. Dall'Era
Yair Lotan
Hristos Z. Kaimakliotis
Andrea Necchi
Vinnie Y. T. Liu
Ewan A. Gibb
Jonathan L. Wright
Omar Y. Mian
Tarek A. Bismar
Stephen A. Boorjian
Joep J. de Jong
Huei-Chung Huang
Peter C. Black
Elai Davicioni
Joost L. Boormans
Urology
Source :
Journal of Urology, 207(3), 541-550. Elsevier Inc.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Purpose Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) prior to radical cystectomy (RC) in patients with non-metastatic muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) confers an absolute survival benefit of 5-10%. There is evidence that molecular differences between tumors may impact response to therapy, highlighting a need for clinically validated biomarkers to predict response to NAC. Materials and methods Four bladder cancer cohorts were included. Inverse probability weighting was used to make baseline characteristics (age, sex, and clinical tumor stage) between NAC-treated and untreated groups more comparable. Molecular subtypes were determined using a commercial genomic subtyping classifier. Survival rates were estimated using weighted Kaplan Meier (KM) curves. Cox proportional hazards (PH) models were used to evaluate the primary and secondary study endpoints of overall survival (OS) and cancer-specific survival (CSS), respectively. Results A total of 601 patients with MIBC were included, where 247 had been treated with NAC and RC and 354 underwent RC without NAC. With NAC, the overall net benefit to OS and CSS at three years was 7% and 5%, respectively. After controlling for clinicopathologic variables, non-luminal tumors had greatest benefit from NAC with 10% greater OS at 3 years (71% vs 61%) while luminal tumors had minimal benefit (63% vs 65%) for NAC vs. non-NAC, respectively. Conclusions In patients with MIBC, a commercially available molecular subtyping assay revealed non-luminal tumors received the greatest benefit from NAC, while patients with luminal tumors experienced a minimal survival benefit. A genomic classifier may help identify patients with MIBC who would benefit most from NAC.

Details

ISSN :
15273792 and 00225347
Volume :
207
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of urology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6eb9dc0c687a21297f65698dac6d5db4