The clinical efficacy of submucosal anal injections of methotrexate in advanced bladder cancer is investigated. An experimental study on 20 mice has shown that methotrexate injected into the anal submucosa has no clinicopathological effect on the anorectum. The clinical study comprised 18 patients with advanced bladder cancer (13 with stage T3 and 5 with stage T4 disease) as a test group in whom methotrexate was injected into the anal submucosa and 8 (6 with stage T3 and 2 with stage T4 cancer) treated concurrently with intravenous methotrexate. The dose in both groups was 50 mg. every 5 days for 5 consecutive doses. The course was repeated at 3-week intervals. Most patients received methotrexate as outpatients. Methotrexate blood levels were measured 4 and 24 hours after administration in both groups. In the test group 10 of the 18 patients showed complete tumor regression and were alive 21 to 50 months after the start of treatment. Partial regression was observed in 8 patients. Hematological reserve remained unchanged. Mild toxicity occurred in 3 patients. Of the 8 patients treated intravenously the tumor showed partial regression in 1, was stable in 3 and progressed in 4. Side effects were severe in 5 patients. Our results show that methotrexate injection is highly effective in the treatment of advanced bladder cancer. It is safe, well tolerated and can be used on an outpatient basis.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0022-5347(17)41702-2DOI Listing

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