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Bladder Cancer

NICE guideline [NG2] Bladder cancer: diagnosis and management. Published: Feb 2015.

NICE guideline [NG12] Suspected cancer: recognition and referral 1.6 Urological cancers. Last updated: May 2025.

Background information added accordingly.

Date: 06/12/25

Background Information

Histology

There are 2 main types of bladder cancers: [Ref]

  • Transitional cell carcinoma (urothelial carcinoma) – 95% cases
  • Squamous cell carcinoma

Risk Factors

Risk factors for bladder cancer: [Ref]

  • Advanced age (esp. >55 y/o)
  • Tobacco smoking – most important risk factor
  • Occupational exposure to aromatic amines (primarily seen in industrial areas processing dye, paint, metal and petroleum products)
  • Water pollution (exposure to arsenic in drinking water)
  • Family history
  • Pelvic radiation (e.g. external-beam radiotherapy for prostate cancer)
  • Drugs
    • Cyclophosphamide
    • Pioglitazone

Notably, the following risk factors predispose patients to squamous cell carcinoma rather than transitional cell carcinoma: [Ref]

  • Chronic mechanical irritation of the bladder
    • Long-term indwelling catheters and intermittent self-catheterisation
    • Bladder stones
  • Chronic cystitis
    • Schistosomiasis (seen in the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and South America)
    • Recurrent UTIs

Clinical Features

Hallmark clinical feature: painless visible haematuria

 

Other features:

  • Recurrent UTIs
  • Abdominal / pelvic pain
  • Urinary obstruction in advanced cases

Diagnosis

Bladder Cancer Red Flags and Referral

Refer with suspected bladder cancer pathway if:

  • ≥45 y/o with unexplained visible haematuria in the absence of UTI / persisting or recurring after UTI treatment, OR
  • ≥60 y/o with unexplained non-visible haematuria + dysuria / WCC

 

Consider non-urgent referral if: ≥60 y/o + recurrent / persistent unexplained UTI

Investigation and Diagnosis

Diagnostic

1st line and gold standard: cystoscopy

  • Direct visualisation, then TURBT for histology (ensure to obtain detrusor muscle)
  • If muscle-invasive bladder cancer is suspected at cystoscopy → consider delaying TURBT after CT / MRI staging

TURBT can, and is often performed at the initial diagnostic cystoscopy. TURBT is both diagnostic (biopsy for histology) and therapeutic (removal).

Staging

Staging is indicated in muscle-invasive bladder cancer and high-risk non-muscle invasive bladder cancer:

  • 1st line: CT / MRI
  • 2nd line: PET CT

Management

Classification of bladder cancer that is used to guide management (simplified from NICE):

  • Non-muscle invasive bladder cancer, further categorised into:
    • High risk – carcinoma in situ / lamina propria invasion / high grade (3)
    • Non-high risk
  • Muscle-invasive bladder cancer
  • Metastatic disease

Exam-yield management of bladder cancer:

  • Non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer → TURBT
  • Muscle-invasive bladder cancer → neoadjuvant chemotherapy + radical cystectomy (or radiotherapy)
  • Metastatic disease → chemotherapy (cisplatin-based combination)

Non-Muscle Invasive Disease

The key takeaway is that TURBT is the mainstay of management of non-muscle invasive bladder cancer. Further management typically involves intravesical therapy (e.g. BCG or mitomycin C), with the choice guided by the patient’s risk stratification (see below).

High-Risk

Offer:

  • Initial: TURBT (can be done at initial diagnostic cystoscopy)
  • Followed by: Repeat TURBT <6 weeks after 1st resection, and a choice of:
    • Radial cystectomy (with urinary stoma / continent urinary diversion), or
    • Intravesical BCG

Non-High Risk (Low / Intermediate)

Offer:

  • TURBT, and
  • Intravesical mitomycin C 

Muscle-Invasive Disease

Offer:

  • Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (cisplatin-based combination), and
  • Radical cystectomy / radiotherapy 

Metastatic Disease

Offer cisplatin-based chemotherapy

Other management:

  • Palliative radiotherapy for bladder symptoms
  • Percutaneous nephrostomy / retrograde stenting for ureteric obstruction

References


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