Bladder Cancer Clinical Trials and Research

MSK is a major research institution. During your treatment for bladder cancer, your care team may ask if you want to join a clinical trial.

What is a clinical trial?

Clinical trials are research studies that test new treatments, procedures, or devices to see how well they work. They are an important part of helping to prevent, treat, and cure cancer. Almost every cancer treatment given to patients was first tested during a clinical trial.

MSK tests new treatments for bladder cancer. Treatment trials test new drugs, drug combinations, devices, and ways of doing procedures, surgery, or radiation therapy.

Sometimes a clinical trial gives you access to new therapies that are not yet available at most hospitals. Talk with your doctor about whether joining a clinical trial is right for you.

Clinical trials are designed to answer questions about:

  • Safety
  • Benefits
  • Side effects
  • Whether some people are helped more than others

MSK will start a clinical trial only if our researchers think we can improve methods for cancer:

  • Prevention
  • Treatment
  • Diagnosis
  • Screening

For more information, please read Clinical Trials at MSK: What You Need to Know.

MSK is developing or improving treatments for people with bladder cancer.

  • We led the way in developing immunotherapy drugs for advanced bladder cancer.
  • Our patients were among the first to get atezolizumab (Tencentriq®) as part of a clinical trial. Based on this research, it became the first new drug approved for bladder cancer in more than 20 years.
  • Our researchers also directed studies that led to the approval of pembrolizumab (Keytruda®) for bladder cancer.

Current bladder cancer research at MSK

Our current research focuses on genetics and people with bladder cancer. We’re looking at who is more likely to respond well to these immunotherapy drugs, based on the genetic makeup of their tumors.

We’re always looking for ways to make these immunotherapy drugs work better in more people. That includes combining a checkpoint inhibitor with chemotherapy, and testing combinations of checkpoint inhibitors.

MSK researchers also are exploring ways to improve responses to bladder cancer treatments other than immunotherapy.

Our experts can help determine which clinical trial is right for you, including some of our newly opened clinical trials:

You can see a current listing of MSK’s clinical trials for bladder cancer below.

and/or
25 Clinical Trials found
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of the drug trastuzumab deruxtecan (also known as DS-8201A) in patients with inoperable or metastatic solid tumors that produce too much of a protein called HER2, including biliary tract, bladder, cervical, endometrial, ovarian, and pancreatic cancers.
Researchers are comparing different treatments for non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). The people in this study have NMIBC that keeps growing after treatment with an immunotherapy called Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG). They do not want surgery to remove the bladder (radical cystectomy).
To learn more about the purpose of this study and to find out who can join, please click here to visit ClinicalTrials.gov for a full clinical trial description.
Researchers in this study want to see how a new form of radiation therapy works to treat metastatic cancer. Metastatic means the cancer has spread to another part of the body from its original place. The people in this study have solid tumors that spread to soft tissues in the chest, abdomen (belly), or pelvis. In addition, they need radiation therapy to help control symptoms such as pain.