Abstract 2011P
Background
Neoadjuvant immunotherapy-driven bladder preservation (Neoimmu-CMT), despite its prominence, is constrained in application due to the absence of robust clinical evidence. Currently, there is a lack of comparative studies on the efficacy of Neoimmu-CMT versus the traditional trimodal therapy (TMT) or neoadjuvant chemotherapy- driven bladder preservation (NAC-CMT). To address this gap, our study (ChiCTR2300069303) aims to assess Neoimmu-CMT's viability and identify suitable candidates through a multicenter, propensity score-matched analysis.
Methods
The study included 163 patients from 14 hospitals, categorized into Neoimmu-CMT (n=97), TMT (n=30), and NAC-CMT (n=36) subgroups. PSM was utilized to mitigate baseline variability. Primary outcomes were disease-free survival (DFS), bladder-intact DFS (BI-DFS), and overall survival (OS). Univariate and multivariate Cox analyses were used to identify potential prognostic factors. Biomarker assessment comprised immunohistochemistry and single-cell RNA sequencing.
Results
Post-PSM, Neoimmu-CMT significantly outperformed NAC-CMT in DFS (HR: 2.112, 95% CI: 1.247-3.576, P=0.005) and BI-DFS (HR: 2.329, 95% CI: 1.138-4.770, P=0.021), with a 2-year BI-DFS rate of 90.28% compared to NAC-CMT's 71.59%. However, Neoimmu-CMT and TMT showed no significant difference in DFS and BI-DFS, with Neoimmu-CMT marginally surpassing TMT in 2-year BI-DFS rates (86.42% vs. 80.89%). Clinical complete response to neoadjuvant treatment and lower clinical T stage were positive prognostic factors for Neoimmu-CMT. Biomarker analysis showed the tumor microenvironment immune phenotype closely relates to bladder preservation outcomes. The limitations included inherent bias from its retrospective design, the brief follow-up duration and the sample size limited.
Conclusions
Neoimmu-CMT is a promising bladder preservation strategy, comparable to TMT and superior to NAC-CMT. Its advancement could significantly broaden bladder preservation treatment options.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Xiangya Hospital, Central South University.
Funding
The National Natural Science Foundation of China, the China Postdoctoral Innovation Talents Support Program, the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation, Hunan Natural Science Foundation, Hunan Province Young Talents Program, Changsha Natural Science Foundation, the Youth Science Foundation of Xiangya Hospital.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
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