
Bladder cancer is a common disease in the elderly population. Approximately 570,000 cases are diagnosed annually worldwide, with a median age at diagnosis of 70 years. Muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) comprises about 25% of bladder cancer diagnoses, and many patients with MIBC may not receive curative-intent therapy. Elderly patients are the most affected by this unmet need.
TAR-200 is a novel treatment consisting of a small, flexible, silicone delivery system that provides sustained, local release of gemcitabine to the bladder over a 21-day dosing cycle. Results of the global, phase 1 TAR-200-103 study, which evaluated the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of TAR-200 in patients with MIBC who refused or were unfit for curative-intent therapy, were presented at the American Urological Association 2023 Annual Meeting.
Patients eligible for the study had cT2-cT3bN0M0 urothelial carcinoma of the bladder. A total of 35 patients were enrolled, and 68.6% of patients were male. The median age was 84 years old. Patients received up to 4 consecutive 21-day cycles of TAR-200 during an 84-day induction period within 7 weeks of transurethral resection of bladder tumor.