Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-B01 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 20:52


Bladder Tumors 239

Bladder Tumors.....................................


MARKLYN J. JONES, MD and KENNETH S. KOENEMAN, MD

history & physical
History
■Tobacco most common cause (>30–50% of cases)
■Fourth leading cause of cancer death
■M > F (2.5X), White > African American
■Incidence increases with age
■Chronic cystitis, especially squamous cell Ca (indwelling catheter,
stones, Schistosoma haematobium)
■Cyclophosphamide, radiation exposure to bladder, or chemical
exposure (aromatic amines; aniline dyes most common)

Signs & Symptoms
■Hematuria, microscopic or gross, often painless in up to 80%
■Irritative voiding symptoms (frequency, urgency, dysuria), with ster-
ile urine
■Flank pain secondary to hydronephrosis/ureteral obstruction
■Bone pain (mets) or pelvic pain (mass)
■Sites of metastasis from transitional cell Ca (most to least): pelvic
lymph nodes, liver, lung, bone, and adrenal gland

tests
■History and Physical – include bimanual examination
■Urine: hematuria (always refer patient to urologist for work-up of
gross hematuria or 2 of 3 UAs with microscopic hematuria [>3
RBCs/hpf]); can have pyuria, but rule out cystitis
➣Cytology, especially positive in high-grade TC Ca or CIS
➣Special tests: BardTM BTA-STAT, NMP-22 (nuclear matrix pro-
tein), hyaluronidase ELISA, FISH, tumors with p53 overex-
pression more likely to progress and less likely to respond to
chemotherapy
■Blood: CBC (anemia), and LFTs to rule out bone or liver mets, and
alkaline phosphatase to rule out bone mets; if gross hematuria, check
PT/PTT, platelets
■Screening – Only for high-risk populations (tobacco), can per-
form UA, urine cytology or special urine tests (BTA-STAT, NMP-22,
hyaluronidase ELISA, or FISH)
■Imaging
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