Radiochemotherapy in locally invasive non-metastatic carcinoma of the bladder

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Abstract

We therefore believe that our therapeutic concept is a true alternative to primary cystectomy, with comparable survival rates. We observed a high rate of functional organ preservation in long-term survivors (79% with complete remission (CR) after 5 years). Radiation bladders were rare at doses not exceeding 60 Gy. Age and co-morbidity were not exclusion criteria. Presence of a competent and cooperative radiotherapy department is a precondition to preventing akinetic radiation bladders. Continuous life-long follow-up is necessary. Cystectomy, together with modern urinary diversions, is still necessary; it is performed in non-responders and in patients with muscle-invasive recurrences.

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Brod, J. L., Kühn, R., Schafhauser, W., & Schrott, K. M. (2004). Radiochemotherapy in locally invasive non-metastatic carcinoma of the bladder. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 539 A, pp. 143–153). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-8889-8_12

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