Abstract
Chemotherapy is an indispensable measure in the treatment of invasive or metastatic bladder cancer as even if metastases are not clinically apparent, the majority of cases of invasive bladder cancer are accompanied by micrometastases. At present, MVAC (methotrexate, vinblastine, adriamycin, cisplatin) is the gold standard for bladder cancer chemotherapy. There have consequently been many attempts at MVAC dose-intensification as well as many studies of the feasibility of neoadjuvant chemotherapy using MVAC. Unfortunately, the majority of results from these studies have been negative or contradictory. However, a recent large-scale randomised, controlled study yielded more promising results. Evidence has recently emerged which indicates that a useful chemotherapeutic strategy could possibly be devised by adjusting the dose and timing of MVAC. Increasing effort is also being put into the development of new gold standards for bladder cancer chemotherapy based on the use of newly developed antitumour drugs, and a number of candidates have emerged. It is hoped that the future we will see successful establishment of a number of useful regimens as a result of Phase III clinical studies using MVAC as their control regimen. For example, both gemcitabine and the taxanes, in combination with other drugs, are strong candidates for this purpose. The ultimate therapeutic strategy for bladder cancer will be a therapeutic approach which permits conservation of the bladder even when the malignancy is invasive and steady progress is already being made toward this goal, in limited cases, by means of multidisciplinary treatment.