Abstract

To investigate the safety and efficacy of "quadri-combination" therapy including maximal transurethral resection of bladder tumor (mTURBT), combined with systemic chemotherapy and immunotherapy, concurrent radiotherapy, and immune maintenance therapy. The clinical data of 8 patients with bladder cancer who could not tolerate or refused radical cystectomy at the Department of Urology, Peking University Cancer Hospital from November 2019 to October 2021 were retrospectively analyzed. There were 5 males and 3 females with a mean age of 69 years. The Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group(ECOG) score was 0 in 6 cases and 1 in 2 cases. There were 5 cases of high-grade urothelial carcinoma (1 case of T3b; 2 cases were T2; 2 cases of T1 stage, with multiple tumors and repeated recurrence), 1 case of high-grade urothelial carcinoma with carcinoma in situ (T1/Tis stage), 1 case of high-grade urothelial carcinoma with squamous differentiation (T3b stage), and 1 case of high-grade urothelial carcinoma with glandular differentiation (T2). All patients underwent "quadri-combination" therapy.The patient's tolerance, success rate of bladder preservation and prognosis were evaluated.The median follow-up time was 22.5 (12-35) months. One patient with high-grade muscle-invasive bladder cancer (T2) received mTURBT, albumin-bound paclitaxel and durvalumab combined therapy for 3 cycles, concurrent radiotherapy, and immune maintenance therapy for 18 months, and the tumor recurrence was found. The pathology was high-grade urothelial carcinoma. Salvage radical cystectomy combined with pelvic lymph node dissection is recommended. The remaining 7 patients were regularly reexamined, and no recurrence or metastasis was found.The 2-year progression-free survival rate was 80%, and the success rate of bladder preservation was 87.5%(7/8). Treatment-related adverse reactions were resolved by symptomatic treatment, and patients' compliance and tolerance were acceptable.The "quadri-combination" bladder-preserving therapy is feasible and well tolerated, but further studies are needed.

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