4.2 Review

Contemporary Molecular Classification of Urinary Bladder Cancer

Journal

IN VIVO
Volume 35, Issue 1, Pages 75-80

Publisher

INT INST ANTICANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.21873/invivo.12234

Keywords

Bladder cancer; urology; pathology; molecular subtypes; molecular pathology; review

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Bladder cancer can be classified into basal and luminal molecular subtypes, with basal tumors responding better to immune checkpoint inhibitors but having worse prognosis, while luminal tumors respond better to FGFR3 and HER2. Tumors with squamous differentiation show better response to EGFR-targeting agents.
The significant heterogeneity in the clinical outcome among patients with bladder cancer has highlighted the existence of different biological subtypes of muscle-invasive and non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer. Transcriptional profiling studies revealed that primary bladder cancers can be grouped into 'intrinsic' basal and luminal molecular subtypes. Lumina! tumors have a papillary configuration and express markers of urothelial differentiation (uroplakins, cytokeratin 20) fibroblast growth factor 3 (FGFR3), E-cadherin and early cell-cycle genes. On the contrary, basal tumors express markers of the basal layer of the urothelium (cluster of differentiation 44, cytokeratin 5/6 and cytokeratin 14); some show squamous differentiation. Patients with basal tumors respond better to immune checkpoint inhibitors and have a worse prognosis than those with lumina! tumors, who respond better to FGFR3 and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2. Patients with squamous differentiation tumors show better response to agents targeting epidermal growth factor receptor. The aim of this review was to highlight the chronological order of research performed in the field of the molecular classification of bladder cancer, with particular emphasis on prototypical research projects and recent advances. If prospective studies confirm the association of bladder cancer molecular subtypes with different responses and prognoses to targeted therapies, molecular subtyping will be incorporated into bladder cancer management.

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