Avoid BCG in patients with low-risk disease.
Intravesical chemotherapy is the first-line option for patients with intermediate-risk NMIBC.
Utilize alternative intravesical chemotherapy rather than BCG for patients who would normally receive BCG as a second-line therapy for intermediate-risk NMIBC.
For high-risk NMIBC, high-grade T1 and CIS patients undergoing induction therapy should be prioritized for full-strength BCG. If not available, then employ reduced 1/2 to 1/3 dose.
If the BCG stocks available for maintenance therapy for NMIBC patients, attempt 1/3 dose BCG and limit doses to 1 year.
During a BCG supply shortage, do not utilize maintenance therapy and limit induction BCG to BCG-naive patients with high-risk disease.
If no BCG is available, then physicians should consider mitomycin for induction and maintenance up to 1 year. Other options include gemcitabine, valrubicin, epirubicin, docetaxel, sequential gemcitabine/docetaxel, and/or mitomycin.
Patients with high-risk features who after shared decision making are not willing to accept alternative intravesical agents should be offered initial radical cystectomy.
When a 1/2 to 1/3 dose is used, maximize resources by treating multiple patients in the same day to avoid wasting BCG; coordinate with pharmacy prior to split dosing.