Chemotherapy for bladder cancer (2024)

Chemotherapy uses anti cancer (cytotoxic) drugs to destroy cancer cells.

For muscle invasive bladder cancer you have thedrugs into a vein (intravenously). As the drugs circulate in your blood, they travel throughout your body.They work by disrupting the growth of cancer cells.

This is different to having chemotherapy into the bladder for non muscle invasive bladder cancer.

  • Read about having chemotherapy into your bladder

When do you have it?

You mighthave chemotherapy:

  • before surgery or radiotherapy
  • alongside radiotherapy, to make the radiotherapy work better (chemoradiotherapy)
  • after surgery - if you didn’t have it before
  • as your main treatment, if your cancer has spread (metastatic cancer)

Chemotherapybefore surgery or radiotherapy can shrink the tumour. It aims to make the treatment work better. Doctors call this neoadjuvant chemotherapy. It can lower the risk of bladder cancer coming back in the future.

Chemotherapy after surgery may help to stop the cancer coming back. This is called adjuvant chemotherapy. You might have it if you didn't have chemotherapy before your surgery.

This page is about neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapy. We have a separate page about chemoradiotherapy.

  • Read about chemoradiotherapy

We also have a separate page about chemotherapy for bladder cancer that has spread (metastatic bladder cancer).

  • Read about chemotherapy for metastatic cancer

Types of chemotherapy

You usually have neoadjuvant chemotherapy before surgery or radiotherapy. You have several drugs together. The most common combinations include:

  • gemcitabine and cisplatin (GC)
  • methotrexate, vinblastine, doxobrubicin and cisplatin (MVAC)

You might have chemotherapy alongside radiotherapy. This is called chemoradiotherapy. You might have:

  • a combination of 2 chemotherapy drugs - mitomycin C and fluorouracil (5FU)
  • cisplatin
  • Read about these chemotherapy drugs and their side effects

How you have it

You have chemotherapy into a vein (intravenously). This means you have treatment through a thin short tube (a cannula) that goes into a vein in your arm each time you have treatment.

You usually have chemotherapy as cycles of treatment. Each cycle is either a 2, 3 or 4 week period. Thecycle length varies in time depending on the chemotherapy you are having.

You usually have 3 cycles of chemotherapybefore surgery or radiotherapy. After surgery or radiotherapy, you might have 6 or more cycles.

Your specialist will explain how you have treatment, and how long they expect your treatment course to be.

  • Find out more about having chemotherapy in your vein

Where you have chemotherapy

You usually have treatment into your bloodstream at the cancer day clinic. You might sit in a chair for a few hours so it’s a good idea to take things in to do. For example, newspapers, books or electronic devices can all help to pass the time.You can usually bring a friend or family member with you.

You have some types of chemotherapy over several days. You might be able to have some drugs through a small portable pump that you take home.

For some types of chemotherapyyou have to stay in a hospital ward. This could be overnight or for a couple of days.

Some hospitals may give certain chemotherapy treatments to you at home. Your doctor or nurse can tell you more about this.

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Before you start chemotherapy

You need to have blood tests to make sure it’s safe to start treatment. You usually have these a few days before or on the day you start treatment. You have blood tests before each round or cycle of treatment.

Side effects

Common chemotherapy side effects include:

  • feeling sick
  • loss of appetite
  • losing weight
  • feeling very tired
  • increased risk of getting an infection
  • bleeding and bruising easily
  • diarrhoea or constipation
  • hair loss

Contact your doctor or nurse immediately if you have signs of infection. These include a temperature above 37.5C or below 36C, or generally feeling unwell. Infections can make you very unwell very quickly.

Side effects depend on:

  • which drugs you have
  • how much of each drug you have
  • how you react

Tell your treatment team about any side effects that you have.

Most side effects only last for a few days or so. Your treatment team can help to manage any side effects that you have.

  • Read more about the chemotherapy drugs and their possible side effects

Dietary or herbal supplements and chemotherapy

Let your doctors know if you:

  • take any supplements
  • have been prescribed anything by alternative or complementary therapy practitioners

It’s unclear how some nutritional or herbal supplements might interact with chemotherapy. Some could be harmful.

  • Read about safety issues with herbal, vitamin and diet supplements

When you go home

Chemotherapy can be difficult to cope with. Tell your doctor or nurse about any problems or side effects that you have. The nurse will give you telephone numbers to call if you have any problems at home.

After your chemotherapy

When you have chemotherapy before surgery or radiotherapy, your doctor needs to know how well it is working. You might have a cystoscopy or CT scan during or after your course ofchemotherapy. This can show your doctor whether the cancer has shrunk.

When you have chemotherapy after surgery, you have the normalfollow up appointments.

  • See how you have follow up for muscle invasive bladder cancer
Chemotherapy for bladder cancer (2024)

FAQs

Chemotherapy for bladder cancer? ›

Intravesical chemotherapy

At what stage of bladder cancer is chemotherapy used? ›

Also called systemic treatment. through a needle into a vein. A combination of chemotherapy drugs that includes cisplatin is standard treatment for stage 2 and stage 3 bladder cancer.

How successful is chemotherapy for bladder cancer? ›

In the present study, 5-year survival rate was not affected by neoadjuvant chemotherapy in invasive bladder tumor. Complete pathological remission (stage p0) was found in 28% and pathological downstaging (stage < T2) was seen in 9% of patients in the neoadjuvant chemotherapy group.

What are the odds of beating bladder cancer? ›

The 5-year relative survival rate of people with bladder cancer that has not spread beyond the inner layer of the bladder wall is 96%. Almost half of people are diagnosed with this stage. If the tumor is invasive but has not yet spread outside the bladder, the 5-year relative survival rate is 70%.

Can bladder cancer be fully cured? ›

Non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer can often be cured. For muscle-invasive bladder cancer, prognosis also depends on whether carcinoma in situ is also present.

Do you lose your hair with chemo for bladder cancer? ›

Common side effects of chemo include: Nausea and vomiting. Loss of appetite. Hair loss.

How many rounds of chemo is normal for bladder cancer? ›

You usually have 3 cycles of chemotherapy before surgery or radiotherapy. After surgery or radiotherapy, you might have 6 or more cycles. Your specialist will explain how you have treatment, and how long they expect your treatment course to be.

Does bladder chemo make you sick? ›

Because intravesical chemotherapy puts the drugs directly into the bladder, it has fewer side effects than systemic chemotherapy (when the drugs reach the whole body). The main side effect is bladder inflammation (cystitis). Signs of cystitis include wanting to pass urine more often or a burning feeling when urinating.

Is chemotherapy for bladder cancer painful? ›

Side effects of chemotherapy will depend mainly on the type of drug, the dose, how it's given and your overall health. Intravesical chemotherapy may cause an irritated or burning feeling in the bladder. Some common side effects of systemic chemotherapy drugs used for bladder cancer are: nausea and vomiting.

What is the life expectancy of a person with bladder cancer? ›

around 75 out of every 100 (around 75%) survive their cancer for 1 year or more after diagnosis. more than 50 out of every 100 (more than 50%) survive their cancer for 5 years or more after they are diagnosed. around 45 out of every 100 (around 45%) survive their cancer for 10 years or more after diagnosis.

Where is the first place bladder cancer spreads? ›

Where can bladder cancer spread to? Not all bladder cancers will spread. But If it does it's most likely to spread to the structures close to the bladder, such as the ureters, urethra, prostate, vagin*, or into the pelvis. This is called local spread.

What causes death with bladder cancer? ›

But researchers also noted that people with bladder cancer had a higher risk of dying from secondary cancers, heart diseases, and COPD than the people who never had bladder cancer. It should be noted that heart disease and COPD are both smoking-related diseases, as is bladder cancer.

What are the signs that bladder cancer is getting worse? ›

If bladder cancer reaches an advanced stage and begins to spread, symptoms can include:
  • pelvic pain.
  • bone pain.
  • unintentional weight loss.
  • swelling of the legs.
Nov 13, 2023

What is the new treatment for bladder cancer? ›

UPDATE: On December 15, 2023, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved enfortumab vedotin (Padcev) in combination with pembrolizumab (Keytruda) for people with bladder cancer that has spread to other parts of the body or cannot be removed surgically.

Is bladder cancer usually fatal? ›

Also, we found that bladder cancer was the fourth leading cause of cancer deaths in American men over the age of 80 years. Previous studies have shown that the 3-year overall survival rate for bladder cancer was 70%, whereas the 10-year overall survival rate was only 42%.

How long can you have bladder cancer without knowing? ›

Can bladder cancer go undetected for years? If symptoms such as blood in the urine and changes in urinary habits are ignored by an individual and/or repeatedly misdiagnosed, it's possible that bladder cancer may not be detected for months or, in some cases, even years.

Do you always need chemo for bladder cancer? ›

The treatment options depend on the grade and stage of your tumor. If you have a high-grade, non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer, we generally treat that with a transurethral resection of the bladder tumor, followed by intravesicle therapy, either with chemotherapy or immunotherapy, like BCG.

Do you need chemo for Stage 1 bladder cancer? ›

In either case, the cancer is only in the inner lining layer of the bladder. It has not invaded (spread deeper into) the bladder wall. This early stage of bladder cancer is most often treated with transurethral resection (TURBT) with fulguration followed by intravesical chemotherapy within 24 hours.

What is the difference between Stage 2 and Stage 3 bladder cancer? ›

Stage II: The cancer has grown into the muscle behind the inner lining of the renal pelvis or ureter. The cancer has not spread to the lymph nodes or other parts of the body (T2, N0, M0). Stage III: The cancer has grown past the muscle and into the fat surrounding the kidney or ureter or into the renal parenchyma.

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