Bladder cancer (BC) is an age-associated malignancy with increased prevalence in the elderly population. Elderly patients are a vulnerable population at increased risk for treatment-related toxicity secondary to medical comorbidities and geriatric syndromes. As a result, this population has been historically undertreated and suffers worse disease-specific outcomes than younger patients with BC. Recognition of this disparity has led to efforts to individualize treatment decisions based on functional status rather than chronologic age in an effort to optimize the use of curative therapies for the fit elderly and modify treatments to reduce the risk of toxicity and disease-related morbidity in vulnerable or frail patients. The comprehensive geriatric assessment is a decision framework that helps to balance underlying health considerations and risks of therapy with aggressiveness of the cancer. Development of systemic therapies with increased efficacy against BC and reduced toxicity are eagerly awaited, as are techniques and interventions to reduce the morbidity from surgery and radiation for patients with BC.
Bladder cancer in the elderly patient: challenges and solutions
E. Guancial,Breton N. Roussel,D. Bergsma,K. Bylund,D. Sahasrabudhe,E. Messing,S. Mohile,C. Fung
Published 2015 in Clinical Interventions in Aging
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- Publication year
2015
- Venue
Clinical Interventions in Aging
- Publication date
2015-06-10
- Fields of study
Medicine
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- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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