Intravesical Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) is an immunotherapy treatment used primarily for early-stage (non-muscle-invasive) bladder cancer. It involves directly instilling a weakened strain of the Mycobacterium bovis bacteria (the same organism used in the TB vaccine) into the bladder via a catheter.

How It Works:

  • BCG stimulates the immune system, triggering an inflammatory response that helps destroy cancer cells in the bladder lining.
  • It is most effective for carcinoma in situ (CIS) and high-grade Ta/T1 tumors to prevent recurrence and progression.

Administration:

  • A catheter is inserted into the bladder.
  • BCG solution is infused and retained for 1–2 hours.
  • The patient then voids the solution naturally.
  • Treatment is typically given once weekly for 6 weeks (induction therapy), sometimes followed by maintenance therapy (additional doses over several months).

Side Effects:

  • Common: Urinary frequency, urgency, dysuria (painful urination), hematuria (blood in urine), fatigue, low-grade fever.
  • Serious (rare): BCG infection (systemic), high fever, persistent flu-like symptoms, granulomatous prostatitis, or contracted bladder.

Contraindications:

  • Active urinary tract infection (UTI).
  • Immunosuppression (e.g., HIV, chemotherapy).
  • Gross hematuria or traumatic catheterization.
  • History of BCG sepsis.

Efficacy:

Mechanism:

BCG attaches to the bladder wall, recruiting immune cells (T-cells, macrophages, cytokines) that attack both bacteria and cancer cells.

Synonyms
Intravesical BCG, Intravesical Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG)
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