Background: To date, there has been limited synthesis of RWE studies in high-risk nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer (HR-NMIBC). The objective of this research was to conduct a systematic review of published real-world evidence to better understand the real-world burden and treatment patterns in HR-NMIBC. Methods: An SLR was conducted following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines with the scope defined by the Population, Intervention Comparators, Outcomes, and Study design (PICOS) criteria. EMBASE, MEDLINE, and Cochrane databases (Jan 2015-Jul 2020) were searched, and relevant congress abstracts (Jan 2018-Jul 2020) identified. The final analysis only included studies that enrolled >= 100 patients with HR-NM1BC from the US, Europe, Canada, and Australia. Results: The SLR identified 634 RWE publications in NMIBC, of which 160 studies reported data in HR-NMIBC. The average age of patients in the studies was 71 years, and 79% were males. The rates of BCG intravesical instillations ranged from 3% to 86% (29-95% for induction and 8-83% for maintenance treatment). Five-year outcomes were 17-89% recurrence-free survival (longest survival in patients completing BCG maintenance), 58-89% progression-free survival, 71-96% cancer-specific survival (lowest survival in BCG-unresponsive patients), and 28-90% overall survival (lowest survival in patients who did not receive BCG or instillation therapy). Conclusion: BCG treatment rates and survival outcomes in patients with HR-NMIBC vary in the real world, with better survival seen in patients completing maintenance BCG, responding to treatment, and not progressing to muscle-invasive disease. There is a need to better understand the factors associated with BCG use and discontinuation and for an effective treatment that improves outcomes in HR-NMIBC. Generalization of these results is limited by variations in data collection, reporting, and methodologies used across RWE studies.