Purpose: We determined the difference in response to high and standard doses of intravesical epirubicin for treatment of superficial bladder cancer.
Materials and methods: A total of 122 patients were entered into a randomized trial to compare the response of a marker tumor at 3 months, time to first recurrence and recurrence rates for 2 years after intravesical chemotherapy for superficial (pTa/pT1) bladder cancer. Patients were randomized to receive treatment for 1 hour with 1 (standard dose) or 2 mg./ml. (high dose) epirubicin (50 or 100 mg./50 ml. solution).
Results: There was no difference in the marker tumor response rate in 24 of 52 patients treated with the standard dose compared with 21 of 50 treated with the higher dose of epirubicin (p = 0.67). Similarly, the higher dose was not superior in regard to time to first recurrence, with a hazard ratio of 1.46 (p = 0.14, 95% confidence intervals 0.88 to 2.42). Considering the upper end of the confidence interval, we can reliably exclude an absolute difference of greater than 4% at 1 year for time to first recurrence in favor of higher dose chemotherapy.
Conclusions: Epirubicin at double the standard dose for intravesical chemotherapy of superficial bladder cancer is not superior in regard to marker tumor response, time to first recurrence or recurrence rate.