Epidemiology & Risk Factors - Bladder's Bad Bets
- Incidence: Common; Men > Women (~3:1). Peak: 60-70 yrs.
- Higher in industrialized nations.
- Major Risk Factors:
-
ā Smoking: Single largest risk factor, ~50% cases. Risk ā with duration/intensity.
- Occupational: Aromatic amines (benzidine, β-naphthylamine) in dye, rubber, textile, paint industries.
- Chronic Bladder Irritation: Schistosomiasis (ā Squamous Cell Carcinoma risk), chronic UTIs, stones.
- Drugs: Cyclophosphamide, phenacetin.
- Pelvic Irradiation.
- Genetic: Lynch syndrome, NAT & GST polymorphisms.
- Aristolochic acid (herbal remedies). š Mnemonic (Chemicals): "Pee SAC" (Phenacetin, Smoking, Aniline dyes, Cyclophosphamide). oka
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Pathology & Staging - Cancer's ID Card
- Histological Types:
- Urothelial (Transitional Cell) Carcinoma (TCC): >90% of cases.
- Papillary: Most common, often low grade, better prognosis.
- Flat (Carcinoma In Situ - CIS): High grade, aggressive potential if untreated.
- Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC): ~5% (associated with chronic irritation, Schistosomiasis).
- Adenocarcinoma: <2% (often from urachal remnant or bladder exstrophy).
- Urothelial (Transitional Cell) Carcinoma (TCC): >90% of cases.
ā Urothelial (Transitional Cell) Carcinoma is the most common type (>90%).
- TNM Staging (AJCC 8th Ed. Overview): Defines tumor extent, nodal spread, and metastasis.
- T (Primary Tumor): Depth of bladder wall invasion.
- Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer (NMIBC): Ta (non-invasive papillary), Tis (CIS), T1 (invades lamina propria).
- Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer (MIBC): T2 (invades muscularis propria), T3 (invades perivesical fat/tissue), T4 (invades adjacent organs e.g., prostate, uterus, pelvic wall).
- N (Regional Lymph Nodes): N0 (no lymph node spread) to N3 (spread to common iliac nodes).
- M (Distant Metastasis): M0 (no distant spread) or M1 (distant sites e.g., lung, liver, bone).
- T (Primary Tumor): Depth of bladder wall invasion.

Clinical Features & Diagnosis - Spotting the Trouble
ā Painless gross hematuria is the classic presenting symptom, seen in 80-90% of patients.
- Key Symptoms:
- Painless visible hematuria (most frequent).
- Irritative voiding: Dysuria, frequency, urgency (esp. with CIS).
- Advanced: Pelvic/flank pain (obstruction), constitutional symptoms.
- Diagnostic Steps:
- Urine Evaluation:
- Urinalysis, Cytology (High Sp for High-Grade/CIS).
- Tumor Markers (NMP22, BTA): Adjunctive.
- Cystoscopy & TURBT:
- Gold standard for diagnosis & initial staging (T-stage, grade).
- Allows biopsy/resection.
- š Bimanual Exam Under Anesthesia (BEUA) during TURBT assesses local invasion.
- Imaging for Staging:
- CT Urography (CTU): Evaluates entire urothelium; stages local/nodal/distant disease.
- MRI: Detailed local staging.
- Chest/Bone Scan: Metastatic workup for Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer (MIBC).
- Urine Evaluation:

Management Principles - Battling the Bulge
- Goal: Cure, Bladder Preservation, QoL.
- NMIBC (Ta, T1, CIS):
- Transurethral Resection of Bladder Tumor (TURBT) is diagnostic & therapeutic.
- Adjuvant Intravesical Therapy:
- Low Risk: Single Mitomycin C dose.
- Intermediate Risk: Mitomycin C or BCG.
- High Risk: BCG (Bacillus Calmette-GuƩrin).
ā Intravesical BCG is the mainstay for high-risk Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer (NMIBC) after TURBT.
- MIBC (ā„T2):
- Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy (NAC) with Cisplatin (if fit) improves survival.
- Radical Cystectomy (RC) + Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection (PLND) = Gold Standard.
- Urinary Diversion: Ileal conduit, Orthotopic neobladder.
- Bladder Preservation: Trimodal Therapy (TURBT + Chemo + RT) in select patients.
- Metastatic (M1): Systemic Chemo, Immunotherapy.
High-Yield Points - ā” Biggest Takeaways
- Transitional Cell Carcinoma (TCC) is the most common type (>90%).
- Painless gross hematuria is the classic presenting symptom.
- Cigarette smoking is the single most important risk factor. Others: aromatic amines, cyclophosphamide.
- Cystoscopy with biopsy is the gold standard for diagnosis and staging.
- NMIBC (Non-Muscle Invasive): TURBT + intravesical BCG (most effective for high-risk).
- MIBC (Muscle Invasive): Radical cystectomy ± neoadjuvant chemotherapy (improves survival).
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