Guidelines

Muscle-invasive and Metastatic Bladder Cancer

Summary of changes

 

New relevant references have been identified through a structured assessment of the literature and incorporated in the various chapters of the 2021 EAU MIBC Guidelines resulting in new sections and added and revised recommendations in:

  • Section 3.3.3 Guidelines for the assessment of tumour specimens
RecommendationStrength rating
Record the sampling sites, as well as information on tumour size when providing specimens to the pathologist.Strong

 

  • Section 5.1.8 Summary of evidence and guidelines for the primary assessment of presumably invasive bladder tumours
Summary of evidenceLE
In men, prostatic urethral biopsy includes resection from the bladder neck to the verumontanum (between the 5 and 7 o’clock position) using a resection loop. In case any abnormal-looking areas in the prostatic urethra are present at this time, these need to be biopsied as well.2b

 

RecommendationsStrength rating

In men with a negative prostatic urethral biopsy undergoing subsequent orthotopic

neobladder construction, an intra-operative frozen section can be omitted.

Strong
In men with a prior positive transurethral prostatic biopsy, subsequent orthotopic neobladder construction should not be denied a priori, unless an intra-operative frozen section of the distal urethral stump reveals malignancy at the level of urethral dissection.Strong

 

  • Section 5.2.1 - Local staging of MIBC; inclusion of data on multiparametric MRI using the Vesical Imaging Reporting and Data System (VI-RADS) scoring system. No new recommendation has been provided.
  • Section 5.3 - MIBC and health status; this section has been updated, introducing the concept of frailty.
  • Chapter 6 - Markers; this chapter has been significantly revised, presenting two new recommendations.

 

6.5 Summary of evidence and recommendations for urothelial markers

Summary of evidenceLE

There is insufficient evidence to use TMB, molecular subtypes, immune or other gene

expression signatures for the management of patients with urothelial cancer.

-

 

RecommendationsStrength rating
Evaluate PD-L1 expression (by immunohistochemistry) to determine the potential for use of pembrolizumab or atezolizumab in previously untreated patients with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer who are unfit for cisplatin-based chemotherapy.Weak
Evaluate for FGFR2/3 genetic alterations for the potential use of erdafitinib in patients with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma who have progressed following platinum-containing chemotherapy (including within 12 months of neoadjuvant or adjuvant platinum-containing chemotherapy).Weak

 

  • 2 - Pre- and post-operative radiotherapy in muscle-invasive bladder cancer; this section was revised and new data added, resulting in an additional recommendation.

 

7.2.3 Summary of evidence and guidelines for pre- and post-operative radiotherapy

Summary of evidenceLE
Addition of adjuvant RT to chemotherapy is associated with an improvement in local relapse free survival following cystectomy for locally advanced bladder cancer (pT3b─4, or node-positive).2a

 

RecommendationStrength rating

Consider offering adjuvant radiation in addition to chemotherapy following radical

cystectomy, based on pathologic risk (pT3b–4, or positive nodes, or positive margins).

Weak

 

7.3.10 Summary of evidence and guidelines for radical cystectomy and urinary diversion

 

Summary of evidenceLE
Ensuring that patients are well informed about the various urinary diversion options prior to making a decision may help prevent or reduce decision regret, independent of the method of diversion selected.3

 

  • 5.4 Trimodality bladder-preserving treatment
  • 7 Metastatic disease: data from a number of key trials has been included, in particular on immunotherapy combinations in first- and later-line setting, resulting in a number of new recommendations and a change to the treatment flowchart (Figure 7.2).

 

7.7.8 Summary of evidence and guidelines for metastatic disease

 

Summary of evidenceLE
PD-1 inhibitor pembrolizumab has been approved for patients that have progressed during or after previous platinum-based chemotherapy based on the results of a phase III trial.-
PD-L1 inhibitors atezolizumab, nivolumab, durvalumab and avelumab have been FDA approved for patients that have progressed during or after previous platinum-based chemotherapy based on the results of a phase II trial.-
PD-1 inhibitor pembrolizumab and PD-L1 inhibitor atezolizumab have been approved for patients with advanced or metastatic UC unfit for cisplatinum-based first-line chemotherapy and with overexpression of PD-L1 based on the results of single-arm phase II trials.-
The combination of chemotherapy plus pembrolizumab or atezolizumab and the combination of durvalumab and tremelimumab have not demonstrated an OS survival benefit compared to platinum-based chemotherapy alone.-
Switch maintenance with the PD-L1 inhibitor avelumab has demonstrated significant OS benefit in patients achieving at least stable disease on first-line platinum-based chemotherapy.-

 

RecommendationsStrength rating
First-line treatment for platinum-fit patients
Use cisplatin-containing combination chemotherapy with GC or HD-MVAC.Strong
In patients unfit for cisplatin but fit for carboplatin use the combination of carboplatin and gemcitabine.Strong
In patients achieving stable disease, or better, after first-line platinum-based chemotherapy use maintenance treatment with PD-L1 inhibitor avelumab.Strong
First-line treatment in patients unfit for platinum-based chemotherapy
Consider checkpoint inhibitors pembrolizumab or atezolizumab.Weak
Second-line treatment
Offer checkpoint inhibitor pembrolizumab to patients progressing during, or after, platinum-based combination chemotherapy for metastatic disease. If this is not possible, offer atezolizumab, nivolumab (EMA, FDA approved); avelumab or durvalumab (FDA approved).Strong
Further treatment after platinum- and immunotherapy

Offer treatment in clinical trials testing novel antibody drug conjugates (enfortumab

vedotin, sacituzumab govitecan); or in case of patients with FGFR3 alterations, FGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors.

Strong

 

GC = gemcitabine plus cisplatin; FGFR = fibroblast growth factor receptor; HD-MVAC = high-dose intensity

methotrexate, vinblastine, adriamycin plus cisplatin.