作者
J. Alfred Witjes,Marek Babjuk,Joaquim Bellmunt,H.M. Bruins,Theo M. de Reijke,Maria De Santis,Silke Gillessen,Nicholas D. James,Steven MacLennan,Juan Palou,Tom Powles,María J. Ribal,Shahrokh F. Shariat,Theodorus H. van der Kwast,Évanguelos Xylinas,Neeraj Agarwal,T.J.H. Arends,Michalis Liontos,Alison Birtle,Peter C. Black,Bernard H. Bochner,M. Bolla,Joost L. Boormans,Alberto Bossi,Alberto Briganti,Iris Brummelhuis,Max M. Burger,Daniel Castellano,Richard Cathomas,Arturo Chiti,Ananya Choudhury,Éva Compérat,Simon J. Crabb,Stéphane Culine,Berardino De Bari,Willem de Blok,Pieter De Visschere,Karel Decaestecker,Konstantinos Dimitropoulos,José L. Domínguez-Escrig,Stefano Fanti,Valérie Fonteyne,Mark Frydenberg,Jurgen J. Fütterer,Georgios Gakis,B. Geavlete,Paolo Gontero,Bernhard Grubmüller,S. Hafeez,Donna E. Hansel,Arndt Hartmann,Dickon Hayne,Ann Henry,Virginia Hernández,Harry W. Herr,Ken Herrmann,Peter Hoskin,J. Huguet,Barbara Alicja Jereczek‐Fossa,Rob Jones,Ashish M. Kamat,Vincent Khoo,Anne E. Kiltie,Susanne Krege,Sylvain Ladoire,Pedro C. Lara,Anna M. Leliveld,Estefanía Linares-Espinós,Vibeke Løgager,Anja Lorch,Yohann Loriot,Richard P. Meijer,Maria Carmen Mir,Marco Moschini,Hugh Mostafid,Arndt‐Christian Müller,Christoph Müller,James N’Dow,Andrea Necchi,Y. Neuzillet,Jorg R. Oddens,Jan Oldenburg,Susanne Osanto,Wim J.G. Oyen,Luís Pacheco‐Figueiredo,Helle Pappot,Manish I. Patel,Bradley R. Pieters,Karin Plass,Mesut Remzi,Margitta Retz,Jonathan Richenberg,Michael Rink,Florian Roghmann,Jonathan E. Rosenberg,Morgan Rouprêt,Olivier Rouvière,Carl Salembier,Antti Salminen,Paul Sargos,Shomik Sengupta,Amir Sherif,Robert Jan Smeenk,Armand Smits,Arnulf Stenzl,George N. Thalmann,Bertrand Tombal,Barış Türkbey,Susanne Vahr Lauridsen,R. Valdagni,Antoine G. van der Heijden,Hendrik Van Poppel,Mihai Dorin Vartolomei,Erik Veskimäe,Antoni Vilaseca,Franklin A. Vives Rivera,Thomas Wiegel,Peter Wiklund,Andrew Williams,Richard Zigeuner,Alan Horwich
摘要
Although guidelines exist for advanced and variant bladder cancer management, evidence is limited/conflicting in some areas and the optimal approach remains controversial. To bring together a large multidisciplinary group of experts to develop consensus statements on controversial topics in bladder cancer management. A steering committee compiled proposed statements regarding advanced and variant bladder cancer management which were assessed by 113 experts in a Delphi survey. Statements not reaching consensus were reviewed; those prioritised were revised by a panel of 45 experts prior to voting during a consensus conference. Online Delphi survey and consensus conference. The European Association of Urology (EAU), the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO), experts in bladder cancer management. Statements were ranked by experts according to their level of agreement: 1–3 (disagree), 4–6 (equivocal), and 7–9 (agree). A priori (level 1) consensus was defined as ≥70% agreement and ≤15% disagreement, or vice versa. In the Delphi survey, a second analysis was restricted to stakeholder group(s) considered to have adequate expertise relating to each statement (to achieve level 2 consensus). Overall, 116 statements were included in the Delphi survey. Of these statements, 33 (28%) achieved level 1 consensus and 49 (42%) achieved level 1 or 2 consensus. At the consensus conference, 22 of 27 (81%) statements achieved consensus. These consensus statements provide further guidance across a broad range of topics, including the management of variant histologies, the role/limitations of prognostic biomarkers in clinical decision making, bladder preservation strategies, modern radiotherapy techniques, the management of oligometastatic disease, and the evolving role of checkpoint inhibitor therapy in metastatic disease. These consensus statements provide further guidance on controversial topics in advanced and variant bladder cancer management until a time when further evidence is available to guide our approach. This report summarises findings from an international, multistakeholder project organised by the EAU and ESMO. In this project, a steering committee identified areas of bladder cancer management where there is currently no good-quality evidence to guide treatment decisions. From this, they developed a series of proposed statements, 71 of which achieved consensus by a large group of experts in the field of bladder cancer. It is anticipated that these statements will provide further guidance to health care professionals and could help improve patient outcomes until a time when good-quality evidence is available.