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Bladder
cancer
Bladder
cancer
refers to
any of
several
types of
malignant
growths of
the urinary
bladder. It
is a disease
in which
abnormal
cells
multiply
without
control in
the bladder.
The bladder
is a hollow,
muscular
organ that
stores
urine; it is
located in
the pelvis.
The most
common type
of bladder
cancer
begins in
cells lining
the inside
of the
bladder and
is called
urothelial
cell or
transitional
cell
carcinoma (UCC
or TCC).
Signs and
symptoms
Bladder
cancer
characteristically
causes blood
in the
urine, this
may be
visible to
the naked
eye (frank
haematuria)
or
detectable
only be
microscope
(microscopic
haematuria).
Other
possible
symptoms
include pain
during
urination,
frequent
urination or
feeling the
need to
urinate
without
results.
These signs
and symptoms
are not
specific to
bladder
cancer, and
are also
caused by
non-cancerous
conditions,
including
prostate
infections
and
cystitis.
Causes
Risk factors
Exposure to
environmental
carcinogens
of various
types is
responsible
for the
development
of most
bladder
cancers.
Tobacco
abuse
(specifically
cigarette
smoking) is
thought to
cause 50% of
bladder
cancers
discovered
in male
patients and
30% of those
found in
female
patients.
Thirty
percent of
bladder
tumors
probably
result from
occupational
exposure in
the
workplace to
carcinogens
such as
benzidine.
Certain
drugs such
as
cyclophosphamide
and
phenacetin
are known to
predispose
to bladder
TCC. Chronic
bladder
irritation
(infection,
bladder
stones,
catheters,
bilharzia)
predisposes
to squamous
cell
carcinoma of
the bladder.
Approximately
20% of
bladder
cancers
occur in
patients
without
predisposing
risk
factors.
Bladder
cancer is
not
currently
believed to
be heritable
(i.e., does
not "run in
families" as
a
consequence
of a
specific
genetic
abnormality).
Genetics
ike
virtually
all cancers,
bladder
cancer
development
involves the
acquisition
of mutations
in various
oncogenes
and tumor
supressor
genes. Genes
which may be
altered in
bladder
cancer
include
FGFR3, HRAS,
RB1 and
TP53.
Several
genes have
been
identified
which play a
role in
regulating
the cycle of
cell
division,
preventing
cells from
dividing too
rapidly or
in an
uncontrolled
way.
Alterations
in these
genes may
help explain
why some
bladder
cancers grow
and spread
more rapidly
than others.
A family
history of
bladder
cancer is
also a risk
factor for
the disease.
Many cancer
experts
assert that
some people
appear to
inherit
reduced
ability to
break down
certain
chemicals,
which makes
them more
sensitive to
the
cancer-causing
effects of
tobacco
smoke and
certain
industrial
chemicals.
Diagnosis
Many
patients
with a
history,
signs, and
symptoms
suspicious
for bladder
cancer are
referred to
a urologist
or other
physician
trained in
cystoscopy,
a procedure
in which a
flexible
tube bearing
a camera and
various
instruments
is
intruduced
into the
bladder
through the
urethra.
Suspicious
lesions may
be biopsied
and sent for
pathologic
analysis.
Pathological
Classification
90% of
bladder
cancer are
transitional
cell
carcinomas (TCC)
that arise
from the
inner lining
of the
bladder
called the
urothelium.
The other
10% of
tumours are
squamous
cell
carcinoma,
adenocarcinoma,
sarcoma,
small cell
carcinoma
and
secondary
deposits
from cancers
elsewhere in
the body.
TCCs are
often
multifocal,
with 30-40%
of patients
having a
more than
one tumour
at
diagnosis.
The pattern
of growth of
TCCs can be
papillary,
sessile
(flat) or
carcinoma-in-situ
(CIS).
The 1973 WHO
grading
system for
TCCs (papilloma,
G1, G2 or
G3) is most
commonly
used despite
being
superseded
by the 2004
WHO grading
(papillary
neoplasm of
low
malignant
potential (PNLMP),
low grade
and high
grade
papillary
carcinoma.
CIS
invariably
consists of
cytologically
high grade
tumour
cells.
Bladder TCC
is staged
according to
the 1997 TNM
system:
* Ta
Non-invasive
papillary
tumour
* T1
Invasive but
not as far
as the
muscular
bladder
layer
* T2
Invasive
into the
muscular
layer
* T3
Invasive
beyond the
muscle into
the fat
outside the
bladder
* T4
Invasive
into
surrounding
structures
like the
prostate,
uterus or
pelvic wall
Staging
The
following
stages are
used to
classify the
location,
size, and
spread of
the cancer,
according to
the TNM
(tumor,
lymph node,
and
metastases)
staging
system:
* Stage
0: Cancer
cells are
found only
on the inner
lining of
the bladder.
* Stage
I: Cancer
cells have
proliferated
to the layer
beyond the
inner lining
of the
urinary
bladder but
not to the
muscles of
the urinary
bladder.
* Stage
II: Cancer
cells have
proliferated
to the
muscles in
the bladder
wall but not
to the fatty
tissue that
surrounds
the urinary
bladder.
* Stage
III: Cancer
cells have
proliferated
to the fatty
tissue
surrounding
the urinary
bladder and
to the
prostate
gland,
vagina, or
uterus, but
not to the
lymph nodes
or other
organs.
* Stage
IV: Cancer
cells have
proliferated
to the lymph
nodes,
pelvic or
abdominal
wall, and/or
other
organs.
*
Recurrent:
Cancer has
recurred in
the urinary
bladder or
in another
nearby organ
after having
been
treated.
Treatment
The
treatment of
bladder
cancer
depends on
how deep the
tumor
invades into
the bladder
wall.
Superficial
tumors
(those not
entering the
muscle
layer) can
be "shaved
off" using
an
electrocautery
device
attached to
a cystoscope.
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