The whole urinary tract will have been exposed to the same risk factors - although more concentrated in the bladder the whole tract is at risk
Aetiology
- Smoking and increased age are the main risk factors
- Schistosomiasis causes squamous cell carcinoma of the bladder in countries with a high prevalence of the infection (e.g. Central Africa)
- Aromatic amines (e.g. beta-naphthyline) are strongly associated with bladder cancer - were used in dye and rubber industries but have been heavily regulated or banned for many years
Pathophysiology
Types of cancer
Transitional cell carcinoma
- Most common, can be referred to as urothelial cell carcinoma
- Often papillary - finger-like projections
- Can also see carcinoma which arise as flat lesions on a background of CIS - tend to be more high grade
Adenocarcinoma
- Can be primary
- Can occur on a background of metaplasia - difficult to distinguish from a colon cancer that has invaded through
Urachal adenocarcinoma
- Remnant of the alantois
- From dome of bladder to the umbilicus
- Usually involutes, in some patients remains patent
- Adenocarcinoma can (rarely) arise within it - isolated to bladder dome
Squamous cell carcinoma
- Persistent inflammation gives rise to squamous metaplasia
- Metaplastic epithelium is unstable - increased risk of malignancy
Clinical presentation
- 80% will present with frank haematuria
- All patients presenting with painless haematuria need to be investigated for malignancy
Investigations
- CT-urogram
- Flexible cystoscopy
Management
- Low risk - monitoring
- High risk - intravesical therapy then monitoring
- Muscle invasive disease - surgery (stoma, surgically construct bladder), external beam radiotherapy
- Metastatic disease - cisplatin-based chemotherapy