Chemotherapy uses medicines to kill fast-growing cells (like cancer cells) or to keep them from dividing (which is how cancers grow). It is a systemic treatment. This means the medicines will travel ...
For patients with advanced bladder cancer who are medically unfit for standard treatment, a new intravesical (inside the bladder) chemotherapy delivery system called TAR-200 is safe and shows initial ...
Approximately 40% of patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer achieve a clinical complete response after neoadjuvant ...
The most common form of bladder cancer is transitional cell carcinoma (TCC). Non-muscle-invasive TCC is classified as stage Ta when the tumour is confined to the urothelium with no spread into the ...
When a doctor suspects bladder cancer, they will order a series of tests which may include urine tests (urinalysis or urine ...
Nearly 200,000 Americans are living with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC)—and after decades with few major advances, newly presented data may signal a turning point in how the disease is treated.
Most people with bladder cancer begin treatment by having surgery to remove their cancer. If bladder cancer has spread beyond your bladder, you might have chemotherapy first. This can help treat ...
ImmunityBio’s sBLA targets BCG-unresponsive papillary NMIBC without CIS, complementing the existing U.S. approval for CIS ...
Phase II study tested combination of sacituzumab govitecan plus pembrolizumab ...
Intravesical chemotherapy involves a healthcare professional injecting chemotherapy medication directly into the bladder to treat cancerous tumors. “Intravesical” means “within the bladder.” ...