articleAnnals of OncologyJan 15, 2026HYBRID OA

ctDNA-guided immunotherapy following radical cystectomy for muscle-invasive bladder cancer: results from the TOMBOLA trial

Aarhus University Hospital · Herlev Hospital · +5 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Standard treatment of localized muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) is neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) followed by radical cystectomy (RC), but ∼50% of patients relapse within 2 years. Adjuvant immunotherapy is currently administered based on pathology and clinical assessment in high-risk patients only, potentially resulting in under- and overtreatment. PATIENTS AND METHODS: TOMBOLA is a Danish, multicenter, open-label, single-arm phase II trial evaluating serial circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) testing to guide postoperative immunotherapy. Low- and high-risk patients with MIBC (cT2-4aN0-1M0) treated with NAC and RC were monitored postoperatively with tumor-informed ctDNA assays. ctDNA-positive patients initiated atezolizumab for up to 1 year, irrespective of imaging; ctDNA-negative patients received immunotherapy only upon radiographic detection of metastases. The primary endpoint was molecular and radiographic complete response. Key secondary endpoints included recurrence-free survival and overall survival.

Results

In total 192 patients were enrolled, and among 178 assessable patients in the intention-to-treat population (median follow-up 34 months), 104 (58%) were ctDNA-positive within 2 years after RC, 63% within 4 months. The median lead time from ctDNA detection to imaging-confirmed recurrence was 90 days (range -61 to 961 days). Of the ctDNA-positive patients, 84 completed atezolizumab and had scanning and ctDNA analyses available for primary endpoint assessment. Some 60% (50/84) of patients achieved the primary endpoint of complete response. One-year recurrence-free survival was 97% in ctDNA-negative patients and 76% in ctDNA-positive patients. Prespecified biomarker analyses showed that ctDNA status and levels, risk stratification, and immune-related gene expression signatures were associated with both recurrence risk and response to immunotherapy. Treatment was well tolerated with no new safety concerns.

Citation impact

7
total citations
FWCI
146.49
Percentile
100%
References
27
Too recent for citation history.

Authors

23

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Cystectomy
  • Immunotherapy
  • Adjuvant
  • Bladder cancer
  • Clinical trial
  • Chemotherapy
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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Funding