IntroductionNon-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) is a common and heterogeneous disease; many patients develop recurrent or progress to muscle-invasive disease. Intravesical drug therapy is a pillar in the current management of NMIBC; notwithstanding, Mitomycin C (MMC) and Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) have numerous limitations including international supply issues, and local and systemic toxicity. Here we review novel intravesical therapeutic options and drug delivery devices with potential for clinical use in the treatment of NMIBC.MethodsPubMed, ClinicalTrials.gov and Cochrane Library searches were undertaken. Systematic reviews, meta-analyses, randomised controlled trials, single-arm clinical trials and national/international conference proceedings were included.ResultsNovel intravesical drugs, including chemotherapeutic agents, immune checkpoint inhibitors, monoclonal antibodies and gene therapies, have demonstrated varying efficacy in the treatment of NMIBC. Current evidence for the majority of treatments is mostly limited to single-arm trials in patients with recurrent NMIBC. Various novel methods of drug delivery have also been investigated, with encouraging preliminary results supporting the intravesical delivery of hyperthermic MMC and MMC hydrogel formulations.ConclusionsNovel therapeutic agents and drug delivery systems will be important in the future intravesical management of NMIBC. As our understanding of the molecular diversity of NMIBC develops, molecular subtyping will become fundamental in the personalisation of intravesical treatments. Further randomised studies are urgently required to investigate the efficacy of novel intravesical treatments and novel regimens, in comparison to current standards-of-care, particularly in the context of international BCG shortages.
Arterioureteral fistula (AUF) is a direct communication between the ureter and an artery and is a rare cause of catastrophic, life-threatening haematuria. Fistulation may occur between the ureter and the abdominal aorta, common iliac, external and internal iliac, and inferior mesenteric arteries, and is typically observed in patients with a prior history of pelvic radiotherapy, oncological pelvic surgeries, aortoiliac vascular procedures, and pelvic exenteration. There is also an increased frequency of cases amongst patients who have undergone urological diversion surgeries and in those with chronic indwelling ureteric stents requiring repeated exchange. As AUF is so rarely encountered in clinical practice, the urologist may fail to appreciate its presence until late in the patient’s presentation; such diagnostic delay is associated with high mortality and thus rapid clinical suspicion and investigative action are necessary. There are sporadic cases of this rare entity mentioned in literature. In this report, we present two cases as well as a review of the literature. A 73-year-old female presented with repeated episodic haematuria for a week in whom the cause of symptoms remained persistently elusive despite repeated imaging and operative approaches. An eventual diagnosis of a secondary right internal iliac-ureteral fistula was ascertained on a subsequent digital subtraction angiography of the renal tract. The fistula was embolised using an endovascular approach. The patient remained stable post emobilisation and was successfully discharged shortly after the procedure. In the second case, a 51-year-old female, presented with hematuria from her ileal conduit for a few days. Initially, the cause of symptoms was thought to be due to ureteric stents. During a change in her stents, brisk bleeding led to further investigation including an iliac angiogram confirming bleeding from the left common iliac artery. She had a covered common iliac artery stent, which successfully controlled her bleeding This report emphasizes the diagnostic difficulty of AUF, outlines the management principles of this rare disease, and aims to increase awareness of this rare yet potentially lethal phenomenon among practitioners of urology and interventional radiology
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