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- Chemotherapeutic agents.
- The initial link between bladder cancer and exposure to aniline dyes was made in 1895.
- Further connections have been established with the rubber manufacturing and textile printing industries.
- Exposure to aromatic amines is the common event, and substances such as 2-naphtylamine, 4-aminobiphenyl, and 4-nitrobipbenyl are believed to be potent carcinogenic elements.
- The latency period may be several decades.
- Tobacco exposure.
- A two- to threefold relative risk for developing bladder cancer exists for cigarette smokers.
- The relationship is less well-established for other tobacco products.
- Chemotherapeutic agents.
- As high as a nine fold relative risk may exist for patients exposed to cyclophosphamide or ifosfamide chemotherapy.
- The presence or absence of hemorrhagic cystitis does not correlate with the likelihood of developing carcinoma.
- The major toxic metabolic agent is acrolein, and most lesions present as muscle-invasive tumors. Administration of Mesna at the time of therapy reduces the urothelial injury by acrolein.
- Schistosomiasis. Schistosoma haematobium
- Endemic in Egypt, where 70 percent of bladder cancers have squamous cell pathology.
- The disease characteristically results in bladder wall calcification, polyposis, ulcers, and urothelial hyperplasia leading to an end-stage contracted bladder.
- The presence of high concentrations of N-nitroso compounds has been implicated as a possible etiologic factor for the development of bladder cancer, which usually presents with an early onset (fifth decade of life).
- More than 40 percent of squamous cell carcinomas associated with schistosomiasis are well-differentiated and typically carry a good prognosis, unlike squamous cell carcinomas of other etiologies.
- Pelvic irradiation.
- A two- to fourfold increase in bladder cancer incidence has been noted in women treated for cervical malignancy.
- Chronic irritation and infection.
- Patients with indwelling urinary catheters for many years are subject to chronic bacterial infection, stone formation, and foreign body reactions.
- A 15- to 20-fold increase in bladder cancer (primarily squamous) has been noted in some series.
- Malignant or pre-malignant changes have been noted in 2 to 8 percent of patients with Foley catheters indwelling for more than 10 years.
- A yearly cystoscopic examination is recommended in these patients.
- Phenacetin.
- The N-hydroxy metabolite of phenacetin is the probable active metabolite that causes urothelial tumors.
- Upper tract lesions are most common. A long latency period and massive ingestion (5 to 10 kg) are characteristic of this condition.
- Bladder exstrophy.
- This rare midline closure defect is associated with bladder adenocarcinoma.
- Occurs in patients who underwent late closure and is thought to result from chronic irritation.
- Coffee.
- Coffee and tea have been implicated in a few studies.
- The relationship is not strong and is further weakened by the confounding occurrence of associated smoking.
- Saccharin.
- Artificial sweeteners have been shown to result in bladder cancer in experimental animals.
- No association has been proven in humans.
References
- Droller MJ: Bladder: Anatomical overview in surgical management of urologic disease: An anatomic approach, MJ Droller, St. Louis, Mosby Yearbook, p 575, 1992.
- Herr HW, Schwalb DM, Zhang ZF, et al: Intravesical bacillus Calmette-Guerin therapy prevents tumor progression and death from superficial bladder cancer: Ten-year follow-up of a prospective randomized trial. J Clin Oncol 13:1404, 1995.
- Lamm DL: Complications of bacillus Calmette-Guerin immunotherapy. Urol Clin North Am 19:565, 1992.
- Malkowicz SB: Superficial bladder cancer: The role of molecular markers in the treatment of high-risk superficial disease. Semin Urol Oncol 15:169-178, 1997.
- Messing EM, Catalona W: Urothelial tumors of the urinary tract. In: Campbell's Urology 7th ed. PC Walsh, AB ED Vaughan, AJ Wein, Vol 3, Chap 77, 2327, 1998.
- Spruck CH, Ohneseit PE, Gonzalez-Zulueta M, et al: Two molecular pathways to transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder. Cancer Res 54:784-788, 1994.
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