The addition of two well-tolerated
chemotherapy drugs to radiation therapy led to significantly longer survival
rates among patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer.
In a
new study splitting 360 patients into groups receiving radiation alone or
radiation plus chemotherapy, British researchers found that those undergoing
combined therapies had a 67 percent rate of local disease-free survival after
two years, compared with 54 percent in the radiation group. Five-year overall
survival rates were 48 percent in the chemo-radiation group, compared with 35
percent in the radiation-only group.
"Overall,
the results establish that the addition of chemotherapy to radiotherapy should
become standard practice for organ-preserving treatments of bladder cancer,"
said Dr. Manish Vira, director of the fellowship program in urologic oncology
at the Arthur Smith Institute for Urology in Lake Success, N.Y.
"The
tried-and-true treatment method is still [bladder removal] and certainly we are
moving toward a more multi-disciplinary approach."
The
study is published April 19 in the New
England Journal of Medicine.
About
385,000 cases of bladder cancer are diagnosed annually worldwide, according to
study authors, with the average age at diagnosis over 70. For those whose
cancer has invaded the bladder muscle,
five-year survival rates are about 45 percent regardless of treatment.
For
younger, healthier patients, bladder removal -- known as radical cystectomy --
is considered the gold standard of care for invasive bladder
cancer. But older patients with co-existing medical conditions may not be
as well-equipped to tolerate complications of the procedure, experts said.
The new
study, the largest late-stage trial of its kind, was conducted at 45 medical
facilities in the United Kingdom. Patients were randomly assigned to undergo
daily radiation alone or radiation along with two chemotherapy drugs,
fluorouracil and mitomycin C.
In
addition to improved survival rates, the
number of patients needing bladder removal as a "salvage therapy" --
because other treatments failed -- was lower among those receiving radiationplus chemotherapy.
Adverse
effects from the chemotherapy -- including diarrhea, sore mouth or suppression
of blood cell production -- were low among participants and were managed by
lowering drug dosages, said study author Dr. Nicholas James, a professor of
clinical oncology at the University of Birmingham. in England.
Cost of
the chemotherapy drugs is relatively inexpensive, he said -- about $1,600, plus
pharmacy and intravenous administration costs.
"We
were pleasantly surprised by the overall results, particularly the low reported
toxicity in the chemo-radiotherapy arm compared to the radiotherapy-only
group," James said. "We feel the results are sufficient to change
practice . . . the drugs are cheap and safety was good in an elderly
population."
More
information: The
U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about bladder cancer.
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Maureen
Salamon, HealthDay Reporter in Cancer
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