Abstract

309 Background: Valrubicin was approved in the United States in 1998, removed from the market in 2002 because of manufacturing issues, and reintroduced in 2009. We report the effectiveness and safety of valrubicin, stratified by patient age, from a US multicenter, observational, retrospective study. Methods: Medical records of adults with non–muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) who used valrubicin were abstracted between March and September 2011. The median age (75 [range 42–95] years) was the stratification cutoff. Kaplan-Meier analyses were performed for event-free survival (EFS), worsening-free survival (WFS), and progression-free survival (PFS). Results: 113 patients (mean age, 73.7 years) received intravesical valrubicin (median, 6 [range, 2–18] instillations). Median EFS, WFS, and PFS were similar in patients ≤75 vs >75 years old (see Table); 1-year rates were 17.8% vs 15.4%, respectively, for EFS; 16.1% vs 14.3% for WFS; and 80.2% vs 81.4% for PFS. 11 (19%) patients aged ≤75 years vs 4 (7%) aged >75 years underwent radical cystectomy; 28 (48%) vs 28 (51%), respectively, experienced ≥1 local adverse reaction; 3 (5%) vs 4 (7%) experienced ≥1 serious adverse event; and 4 (7%) vs 1 (2%) discontinued as a result. Conclusions: In patients with NMIBC treated with intravesical valrubicin, effectiveness and safety are similar in patients aged ≤75 and >75 years. Funding: Research and abstract were supported by Endo Pharmaceuticals Inc. [Table: see text]

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