Bladder cancer ranges from early tumors confined to the bladder lining to disease that needs systemic treatment. Our oncologists coordinate medical therapy with your urologist so your care follows one plan.
How we approach it
Whether the cancer is confined to the lining or invades the muscle changes everything about treatment — and we tailor accordingly
Modern bladder cancer care often uses immunotherapy and chemotherapy, alone or alongside surgery
We work hand-in-hand with your urologist on sequencing and surveillance
What the workup looks like
A cystoscopy lets your urologist see the bladder lining and remove tissue, which both confirms the diagnosis and starts the staging.
The key question is whether the cancer has reached the bladder muscle. That single distinction shapes the entire treatment plan.
CT or MRI checks the kidneys, ureters, and lymph nodes so the full picture is clear before treatment begins.
Common questions
What's the most common sign of bladder cancer?
Will I need my bladder removed?
Does immunotherapy help in bladder cancer?
How is it monitored after treatment?
This page is general information, not medical advice for your specific situation. Every diagnosis — and every patient — is different. Bring your questions to your care team.