Multimodal Therapies
Find a Clinical Trial Find out about new research studies for bladder cancer 
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Our medical oncology team at Memorial Sloan-Kettering continues to develop and refine chemotherapy regimens to treat bladder cancer more effectively. For patients with cancers that have spread to other areas of the body or that have recurred following surgery, our doctors may offer systemic therapy, which are substances, such as chemotherapy drugs, that travel through the bloodstream, affecting cancer cells throughout the body.
Some patients who are not eligible for surgery may be candidates for a combination of radiation therapy and chemotherapy, which can preserve the bladder and its function. This combination heightens the cancer cells' sensitivity to radiation, increasing the chance that the bladder cancer cells will be killed.
Precision in Radiation Therapy
Memorial Sloan-Kettering's radiation oncologists use intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) and image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT) to treat bladder cancer. IMRT, which is one of the most advanced and precise radiation treatment techniques, uses radiation beams of varying intensity that are created to match specific tumor shapes and sizes. This helps to reduce the dosage of radiation to healthy tissues and possibly the side effects of treatment. Another type of radiation therapy used to treat bladder cancer is IGRT, a sophisticated technique of radiation delivery that uses radiology imaging (x-ray and/or CT scans) taken immediately before treatment to guide radiation with even greater precision.