Since Sternberg et al. in 1985 first published preliminary results of polychemotherapy in patients with metastatic bladder cancer, it became apparent that transitional carcinoma of the bladder is highly responsive to chemotherapy. Response rates up to 70% with combination therapy regimens like methotrexate, vinblastine, doxorubicin or adriamycin and cisplatin promised that transitional carcinoma might be able to cure even in advanced stages. Chemotherapy has either been applied prior to the local treatment (such as radical cystectomy or radiotherapy) in a neo-adjuvant regimen, or after local therapy in an adjuvant regimen. Although a large number of studies have been published in the past 20 years, the role of the different chemotherapeutic approaches has not been clearly defined. Therefore, neither neo-adjuvant nor adjuvant chemotherapy can be recommended as 'gold standard' treatment for advanced bladder cancer.