Abstract

<div>AbstractPurpose:<p>Bladder preservation is a viable option for some patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC), but an effective noninvasive biomarker test to accurately identify promising candidates is lacking. Here we present the clinical application of a novel tissue-agnostic, urine-based minimal residual disease (MRD) assay in the neoadjuvant setting for personalized disease surveillance and actionable target identification to facilitate bladder-sparing treatment approaches.</p>Patients and Methods:<p>The urinary tumor DNA (utDNA) analysis was evaluated in an investigator-initiated phase I trial RJBLC-I2N003 in which 20 patients diagnosed with resectable MIBC were treated presurgically with the PD-1 inhibitor toripalimab followed by radical cystectomy (RC).</p>Results:<p>We showed that neoadjuvant toripalimab therapy was feasible, safe, and induced a 40% rate (8/20) of pathologic complete response. Longitudinal utDNA profiling outperformed radiographic assessment and conventional biomarkers to predict the pathologic outcome of immune checkpoint blockade. In addition to detecting 3 exceptional responders with molecular MRD-negative status, we identified 7 other individuals characterized for utDNA response and 4 harboring FGFR3 mutants, all of whom (60%, 12/20) could have postponed or avoided RC.</p>Conclusions:<p>These findings demonstrate the safety and efficacy of neoadjuvant toripalimab, and suggest the immense potential of noninvasive utDNA MRD testing to guide tailored decision-making with regard to bladder preservation and change the current treatment paradigm for patients with MIBC.</p></div>

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