Four cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) results in better pathological response and survival than three NACT cycles in patients with muscle invasive bladder cancer, reveals a recent study.
A team of investigators conducted this cohort study to examine the pathological response rates and survival associated with three and four cycles of cisplatin-based NACT in patients with cT2-4N0M0 muscle invasive bladder cancer. Clinical data of 828 patients treated with NACT and radical cystectomy between 2000 and 2020 were analysed.
A total of 384 patients were treated with three NACT cycles and 444 with four cycles. The investigators assessed the pathological objective response (pOR; ypT0-Ta-Tis-T1 N0), pathological complete response (pCR; ypT0 N0), cancer-specific survival, and overall survival in the two cohorts.
Of the patients, 378 achieved pOR (45 percent, 95 percent confidence interval [CI], 42‒49) and 207 attained pCR (25 percent, 95 percent CI, 22‒28). Patients who received four NACT cycles had higher pOR (49 percent vs 42 percent; p=0.03) and pCR (28 percent vs 21 percent; p=0.02) rates than those treated with three cycles.
Multivariable logistic regression analysis confirmed this effect (pOR: odds ratio [OR], 1.46; p=0.008; pCR: OR, 1.57; p=0.007). On multivariable Cox regression analysis, four NACT cycles significantly correlated with overall survival (hazard ratio [HR], 0.68, 95 percent CI, 0.49‒0.94; p=0.02) but not with cancer-specific survival (HR, 0.72, 95 percent CI, 0.50‒1.04; p=0.08).
“These findings may aid clinicians in counseling patients and serve as a benchmark for prospective trials,” the investigators said. “Prospective validation of these findings and assessment of cumulative toxicity derived from an increased number of cycles are needed.”