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      Re: Florus C. de Jong, Iris G. Iflé, Angelique C. van der Made, et al. A Genomic Urine Assay for Surveillance of Patients with Bladder Cancer Treated with Radiotherapy. Eur Urol Open Sci 2024;62:131–9

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      a , b , * , a , b , a , b , c
      European Urology Open Science
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          ctDNA guiding adjuvant immunotherapy in urothelial carcinoma

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            Early Detection of Metastatic Relapse and Monitoring of Therapeutic Efficacy by Ultra-Deep Sequencing of Plasma Cell-Free DNA in Patients With Urothelial Bladder Carcinoma

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              Bladder cancer.

              Bladder cancer is a global health issue with sex differences in incidence and prognosis. Bladder cancer has distinct molecular subtypes with multiple pathogenic pathways depending on whether the disease is non-muscle invasive or muscle invasive. The mutational burden is higher in muscle-invasive than in non-muscle-invasive disease. Commonly mutated genes include TERT, FGFR3, TP53, PIK3CA, STAG2 and genes involved in chromatin modification. Subtyping of both forms of bladder cancer is likely to change considerably with the advent of single-cell analysis methods. Early detection signifies a better disease prognosis; thus, minimally invasive diagnostic options are needed to improve patient outcomes. Urine-based tests are available for disease diagnosis and surveillance, and analysis of blood-based cell-free DNA is a promising tool for the detection of minimal residual disease and metastatic relapse. Transurethral resection is the cornerstone treatment for non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer and intravesical therapy can further improve oncological outcomes. For muscle-invasive bladder cancer, radical cystectomy with neoadjuvant chemotherapy is the standard of care with evidence supporting trimodality therapy. Immune-checkpoint inhibitors have demonstrated benefit in non-muscle-invasive, muscle-invasive and metastatic bladder cancer. Effective management requires a multidisciplinary approach that considers patient characteristics and molecular disease characteristics.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Eur Urol Open Sci
                Eur Urol Open Sci
                European Urology Open Science
                Elsevier
                2666-1691
                2666-1683
                21 June 2024
                August 2024
                21 June 2024
                : 66
                : 10-11
                Affiliations
                [a ]State Key Laboratory of Digital Medical Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing, China
                [b ]School of Biological Science & Medical Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing, China
                [c ]Institute of Sports and Health, Nanjing, China
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author at: State Key Laboratory of Digital Medical Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing, China. 230219371@ 123456seu.edu.cn
                Article
                S2666-1683(24)00384-7
                10.1016/j.euros.2024.04.003
                11245973
                39006470
                a87089be-a76f-421a-bbdd-9a001935523b
                © 2024 The Author

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 29 April 2024
                Categories
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