Urological malignancy Flashcards

1
Q

What cells line the GU tract?

A

Transitional cells

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2
Q

What are the layers of the bladder?

A
  • Urothelium
  • Lamina propria
  • Detrusor muscle
  • Fat
  • Peritoneum
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3
Q

What types of cancers occur in the bladder?

A
  • Transtional cell carcinomas
  • Squamous cell carcinoma
  • Adenocarcinoma
  • Secondary - bowel
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4
Q

What is the most common type of bladder cancer?

A

Transitional cell carcinoma- by a country mile!!! >90%

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5
Q

What are causes of bladder cancer?

A

PACSS

  • Pelvic irradiation
  • Aromatic amines
  • Chronic cystitis
  • Shistosomiasis
  • Smoking - commonest cause
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6
Q

What type of bladder cancer is schistosomiasis most commonly associated with?

A

Squamous cell carcinoma

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7
Q

Where does exposure to aromatic amines most commonly occur?

A

Working in the rubber industry

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8
Q

What is thought to be protective against bladder cancer?

A

Diet rich in fruits and vegetables

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9
Q

What are symptoms of bladder cancer?

A
  • Painless haematuria
  • Recurrent UTI’s
  • Sterile pyuria
  • LUTS
  • Anaemia - rare
  • Abdominal pain
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10
Q

What proportion of bladder cancer patients present with painless haematuria?

A

>80%

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11
Q

Why should everyone with haematuria undergo cystoscopy?

A

Approximately 80% of those with bladder cancer present with painless haematura

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12
Q

Why do individuals with bladder cancer get cystitis with sterile pyuria?

A

Urothelium around cancer becomes inflammed - leads to frequency and pain on voiding

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13
Q

Why might someone with bladder cancer have abdominal pain (if the most common presenting symptom is painless haematuria)?

A
  • Mass effect - pressing on local structures.
  • May also have retention
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14
Q

What physical signs might you see in someone with bladder cancer?

A

Usually none, but can rarely have:

  • Palpable mass
    • Urachus cancer - between synphisis and umbilicus
  • Lower limb oedema - lymphatic/venous obstruction
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15
Q

How would you investigate someone with painless haematuria/symptoms of bladder cancer?

A
  • Flexible cystoscopy +/- biopsy
  • Urine - microscopy/cytology
  • CT urogram
  • Bimanual EUA
  • MRI/Lymphangiography
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16
Q

What does automated flow cytometry look at when doing cytology of urine?

A

Measures the muclear/cytoplasm ratio in large numbers of cells - it is useful for detecting higher grade tumours, esp. CIS

17
Q

What can CT urogram be used for in terms of investigation?

A
  • Diagnosis
  • Staging
18
Q

What is MRI/lymphangiography used for when investigating for bladder cancer?

A

Pelvic node spread

19
Q

What does the stage Tis/Cis mean?

A

Carcinoma in situ

20
Q

What does the stage Ta represent in bladder cancer?

A

Tumour confined to epithelium/papillary carcinoma

21
Q

What does the stage T1 stand for in someone with bladder cancer?

A

Tumour in submucosa or lamina propria

22
Q

What does the stage T2 mean when staging bladder cancer?

A

Invading muscle

23
Q

What does the stage T3 stand for in bladder cancer?

A

Invading perivesical tissue/fat

24
Q

What does T4 stand for in staging bladder cancer

A

Invading adjacent organs

25
Q

What does the prefix of p stand for in the staging of bladder cancer (e.g. pT2a)?

A

Histologically confirmed

26
Q

How would you manage a bladder cancer Tis/Ta/T1?

A
  • Diathermy vira transurethral cystoscopy/TURBT
  • Intravesical BCG - stimulates non-specific immune response
  • Consider mitomycin/epiribicin/gemcitabine as alternative chemos
27
Q

How would you manage stage T2-T3 bladder cancers?

A
  • Radiotherapy - consider salvage cystectomy if fails
  • Radical cystectomy - gold standard
28
Q

What is CIS?

A

Malginantly transformed cells which have not breach the basement membrane. It is highly aggressive and potentially life-threatening

29
Q

How would you manage someone with stage T4 bladder cancer?

A
  • Palliative chemo/radiotherapy
  • Chronic catheterisation/urinary diversion
30
Q

With bladder cancer, what is the general length of time for follow-up for high grade tumours?

A

Every 3 months for 2 years, then every 6 months lifelong

31
Q

With bladder cancer, how long should you follow someone up for if they had low-grade disease?

A

First follow up cystoscopy at 9 months, the yearly after that

32
Q

What are complications of bladder cancer?

A
  • Sexual/urinary dysfunction
  • Massive bladder haemorrhage
33
Q

Why is intravesical BCG used in bladder cancer?

A

Induces a local immune response in the bladder, which reduces the progression of the bladder cancer and can cure high risk disease and CIS

34
Q

What can occur in response to radiotherapy?

A
  • Cystitis/proctitis like symptoms
  • Fibrosed bladder - smaller