Can bladder cancer be cured? Bladder cancer is usually treatable when caught at an early stage but more challenging to address when found later. Recurrence also poses a risk, even with early-stage tumors, so regular surveillance is essential following treatment or surgery.

What Affects Survival Rate and What Treatment Options Are Available for Bladder Cancer? 

After diagnosing bladder cancer, your doctor will try to determine if it has advanced and if it has, how far. Doctors use a staging process to describe how far the tumor has penetrated the surrounding tissue and muscle, and to what extent it has spread to other parts of the body or metastasized. The staging process helps the doctor decide on the best way to treat it.

The American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) TNM system is the most widely used staging system for bladder cancer. It relies on three critical factors:

  • T: The letter "T" stands for "tumor" and describes the degree to which the tumor has grown through the wall of your bladder and into neighboring tissue and muscles.
  • N: The letter "N" stands for "nodes" and notes if the cancer has spread to nearby lymph nodes. Lymph nodes are groups of immune system cells about the size of beans. When cancer starts to spread, it frequently spreads to the lymph nodes nearest the bladder first.
  • M: The letter "M" stands for "metastasized," which means the cancer has spread to other parts of the body, such as the liver, lungs or other lymph nodes farther from the bladder.

The American Cancer Society provides a detailed breakdown of the TNM system. Letters or numbers after T, N and M offer more detail related to the progression of the cancer.

02 Bladder Cancer Grade

What are Bladder Cancer Grades?

Bladder cancer tumors can be classified further based on the way cancer cells look when viewed through a microscope, given this then dictates how they behave. The appearance of the cells contributes to "tumor grade" classification. Bladder cancer can be either high grade or low grade, though a three grade numbering system is often used to provide more detail.

  • High-grade bladder tumor: A type of tumor with abnormal-looking cells and tissue. High-grade tumors grow more aggressively than low-grade tumors and have a higher chance of spreading to the bladder's muscular wall and other organs and tissues.
  • Low-grade bladder tumorA type of tumor with cells closer in organization and appearance to healthy cells. They typically grow more gradually and are less likely to invade the bladder's muscular wall than high-grade tumors.

What are the Survival Rates for Bladder Cancer?

Survival rates are based on real-world case data and illustrate the percentage of individuals with the same stage and type of cancer who are typically still alive after a specific length of time (often five years) after receiving a diagnosis. It’s important to understand that survival rates are relative in that they compare the number of people with the same type and stage of cancer to the number of people in the overall population. A particular stage of bladder cancer, for example, may have a 90% five-year relative survival rate. The 90% figure comes from dividing the percentage of people with cancer who are alive after five years by the percentage of people without the disease who are also alive after five years.

Understanding the typical survival rates for the stage of cancer you are diagnosed with can help you make more informed decisions around treatment. It's recommended you consult your doctor for more information.

The five-year relative survival rates for all bladder cancer stages is 77%. Breaking the five-year survival rates down by stage gives you a more detailed picture and illustrates why tracking stage is useful. Between 2008 and 2014, the five-year relative survival rates were:

  • 95% (stage 0/in situ)
  • 69% (stage I, stage II/localized)
  • 35% (stage III/IVa/regional)
  • 5% (stage IVb/distant)
  • 47% (unknown/unstaged)

How do you Treat Bladder Cancer? 

The bladder cancer treatment your doctor recommends depends on several factors, including:

  • The type of cancer
  • The stage of cancer
  • The grade of cancer
  • Your treatment preferences
  • Your overall health

Bladder cancer treatment options may include:

  • Intravesical chemotherapy: meaning chemotherapy in the bladder, to treat tumors confined to the bladder lining with a high risk of progression or recurrence.
  • Systemic chemotherapy: or chemotherapy to the entire body, to increase the chance of a cure after bladder removal surgery, or as a primary treatment where surgery isn't an option.
  • Radiation therapy: for destroying cancer cells. Radiation therapy is often used as the primary treatment to target localised cancer cells option when surgery isn't an option.
  • Immunotherapy: to trigger the body's immune system to fight cancer cells.
  • Surgery: is part of the treatment for most bladder cancers. The type and extent of the surgery depend on the stage of cancer and other factors such as the longer-term side effects of the procedure.

Your doctor may combine treatment approaches.

Even early-stage bladder cancers have a likelihood of returning, so after treatment, you'll want to continue to see your doctor for follow-up appointments to monitor for recurrence. The types of tests and the frequency of testing depend on the type of cancer and your treatment. Your doctor will work with you to put together an appropriate follow-up plan.

After assessing a patient’s risk profile, doctors will recommend a regular ongoing schedule of cystoscopies to examine the inside of the bladder and urethra. year. Your doctor might recommend additional testing at regular intervals, as well.

Cxbladder is a suite of non-invasive genomic urine tests optimized for bladder cancer rule out

Cxbladder is a suite of easy-to-use and non-invasive tests designed to help rule out urothelial bladder cancer in patients experiencing blood in urine (hematuria) and to monitor for recurrent disease in those who have been treated for non-muscle invasive bladder cancer. The test analyzes five biomarker genes to quickly and accurately rule out the disease, reducing the need for further invasive procedures.
Learn more about Cxbladder     Contact us for more information

 

Sources: 

  1. https://www.cancer.org/cancer/bladder-cancer/about/key-statistics.html
  2. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27370177
  3. https://www.cxbladder.com/us/contact-us/
  4.  https://www.cxbladder.com/us/what-is-cxbladder/
  5. https://www.cxbladder.com/us/bladder-cancer/bladder-cancer-detection/
  6. https://www.cxbladder.com/us/bladder-cancer/types-of-bladder-cancer/
  7. https://www.cxbladder.com/us/what-is-cxbladder/how-it-works/
  8. https://www.cxbladder.com/us/patient-resources/treatment/
  9. https://www.cxbladder.com/us/
  10. https://www.cancer.org/cancer/bladder-cancer/detection-diagnosis-staging/survival-rates.html
  11. https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/322625.php
  12. https://www.news-medical.net/news/2004/04/18/615.aspx
  13. https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/bladder-cancer/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20356109
  14. https://www.medscape.com/answers/438262-38757/what-are-the-5-year-survival-rates-by-bladder-cancer-stage
  15. https://www.healthline.com/health/bladder-cancer/bladder-cancer-survival-rate
  16. https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/322625.php
  17. https://www.mayo.edu/research/departments-divisions/department-urology/bladder-cancer
  18. https://www.cancer.net/cancer-types/bladder-cancer/statistics
  19. https://seer.cancer.gov/statfacts/html/urinb.html
  20. https://www.cancer.org/cancer/bladder-cancer/detection-diagnosis-staging/staging.html
  21. https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/2006834-overview
  22. https://www.cancer.net/cancer-types/bladder-cancer/stages-and-grades
  23. https://www.cancer.gov/publications/dictionaries/cancer-terms/def/relative-survival-rate
  24. https://www.cancer.org/cancer/bladder-cancer/about/key-statistics.html

 

Last Updated: 22 Oct 2024 06:44 am