
Sima P. Porten, MD, MPH, discusses the need to better understand how genetic makeup influences how individuals process environmental toxins.

Sima P. Porten, MD, MPH, discusses the need to better understand how genetic makeup influences how individuals process environmental toxins.

A panelist discusses how benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) treatment has evolved to include a spectrum of minimally invasive and surgical interventions, ranging from emerging technologies like prostatic urethral lift (PUL) and water vapor thermal therapy (WVTT) to more established resective surgical techniques such as transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP), holmium laser enucleation (HoLEP), Aquablation, and Greenlight XPS, providing urologists with a diverse array of options tailored to individual patient characteristics, prostate size, and specific clinical needs.

“I think it will help patients decide what prostate surgery they want,” says Naeem Bhojani, MD, FRCSC.

“The benefit of being here at the University of Minnesota is that we have a bunch of different types of settings to be able to trial this," says Hailey Frye.

"What we found is that 9% of women with a GSM-related diagnosis filled a prescription for vaginal estrogen during the study period, and these women tended to be younger," says Ekene Enemchukwu, MD, MPH, FACS, URPS.

A panelist discusses how Matching-Adjusted Indirect Comparison (MAIC) analyses are limited by potential unmeasured confounding factors, small effective sample sizes after matching, and reliance on published aggregate data, which should be carefully considered when interpreting findings as complementary rather than definitive evidence for treatment decisions.

A panelist discusses how MAIC (Matching-Adjusted Indirect Comparison) methodology addresses the lack of head-to-head clinical trials in metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC) by adjusting for differences in patient characteristics across separate studies to enable more reliable indirect treatment comparisons.

“I feel a lot of providers, with Antiva being available, have unfortunately reserved use of this great FDA-approved agent for BCG-unresponsive patients because of the supply issue with BCG," says Suzanne B. Merrill, MD, FACS.

Betty Wang, MD, provides insight on 3 presentations that she believes “may be game changing” in urology.

Experts discuss whether novel delivery systems in non–muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) could be easily adopted in clinical practice and the challenges they anticipate in operationalizing TAR-200 and other novel delivery systems in urology practices.

Experts discuss the unmet needs in the treatment of non–muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC), highlighting areas where advancements are still needed.

"We should not be preemptively reducing the dose for all our patients, because half of the patients will never develop grade 3/4 anemia," says Neeraj Agarwal, MD, FASCO.

"We can improve urinary tract infections considerably with behavioral modification," says Anna Myers, CNP.

“The NIAGARA approval really begins to bring immunotherapy into the neoadjuvant setting," says Joshua J. Meeks, MD, PhD.

“I think it's primarily due to dietary changes that are more and more prevalent regardless of sex,” says Ian Metzler, MD, MTM.

“I would say the take-home message for this study is that prescribing tamsulosin for a week prior to an anticipated surgery that involves flexible ureteroscopy is a very simple practice that certainly is within standard of care within pediatric urology," says Kate H. Kraft, MD, MHPE, FACS, FAAP.

"“The approval of Gozellix is likely to both streamline and expand access to PSMA-PET imaging, hopefully broadening the distribution and use of gallium 68," says Kelly L. Stratton, MD, FACS.

“It definitely makes it easier for providers [to counsel patients]," says Landon Trost, MD.

“When I talk to physicians outside of urology, as well as within urology, much of the hesitation with using Cost Plus Drugs is that it seems complicated to use, when in reality, the process is actually very simple," says Raymond Xu, MD.

“To find a therapy that's all encompassing, that manages all of this in a long-term fashion, low-dose vaginal estrogen is the preferred treatment,” says Ekene Enemchukwu, MD, MPH, FACS, URPS.

"A lot of people are using [single-use ureteroscopes] nowadays, and part of it is because it really enhances our ability to provide guaranteed care, because we don't have to rely on the reusability of scopes," says Perry Xu, MD.

"This study was an investigator initiated study, and what they wanted to do was a randomized trial for large prostates, so 80 to 180 grams, between Aquablation and prostate enucleation," says Naeem Bhojani, MD, FRCSC.

"This is another tool in our armamentarium to treat muscle-invasive bladder cancer and represents an advance compared to where we've been over the past few decades," says Matthew D. Galsky, MD.

"We demonstrate that patients with metastatic disease stayed on therapy longer—a median of 9 months vs 7 months for the non-metastatic patients," says Rana R. McKay, MD, FASCO.

"We have communicated with Solventum, who makes this software, and they have made changes based on our feedback," says Timothy D. Lyon, MD.

"We see the overall survival, whether it is [in] all-comers, in HRR gene mutation-positive patients, or in HRR gene [mutation]-negative patients or [those] who did not have mutations, the overall survival is about 45 to 47 months," says Neeraj Agarwal, MD, FACS.

Experts share their initial impressions of the available data on immunotherapies, including PD-L1 inhibitors durvalumab and sasanlimab, being evaluated in bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG)–unresponsive patients with non–muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC).

Experts discuss how they communicate various treatment options for non–muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) with patients and health care professionals.

"I think AI is going to have a significant role. We're just at the tip of the iceberg," says Jason M. Hafron, MD, CMO.

"They are risking their own lives for their job, so it's the part of the whole community to do our best to try to keep them safe," says Sima P. Porten, MD, MPH.