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Urological Cancer Kieran Jefferson Consultant Urological Surgeon University Hospital, Coventry Recommended Texts • Urology – a handbook for medical students – Brewster, Cranston et al • Oxford Handbook of Urology – Similar authors, more postgraduate Two-week wait urology • Haematuria – – frank/microscopic over 50 years old • • • • Raised PSA/abnormal DRE Mass in body of testis Renal mass on imaging/palpation Any suspicious penile lesion Haematuria • Common, major challenge for urologists • Visible haematuria 20% chance cancer • Microscopic haematuria 5-10% chance Causes of haematuria • Infection • Benign prostatic hypertrophy • Malignancy – bladder, kidney, ureter, prostate • Stone – bladder, ureter, kidney • Glomerulonephritis – IgA nephropathy • Trauma Management • History and examination • Investigations • Treatment History • Type, duration, associated LUTS or pain • Medication – Anticoagulants – nephrotoxins • Medical/surgical history – stone or previous surgery • SHx – Smoking, chemical exposure, employment Examination • Stigmata of renal disease – Hypertension – Oedema • Abdomino-pelvic masses/scars Investigations • Ideally as part of ‘one-stop’ haematuria clinic • • • • MSU dipstix, M,C&S, cytology FBC, U&Es Flexible cystoscopy USS renal tract +/- or contrast CT Treatment • As per aetiology Bladder cancer • 4th commonest male/10th commonest female cancer • Risk Factors – Age, sex – Smoking, exposure to benzene compounds – Drugs – phenacetin, cyclophosphamide Bladder cancer subtypes • Primary – – – – Transitional cell carcinoma Squamous cell carcinoma Adenocarcinoma Sarcoma • Secondary Presentation • Symptoms/signs from primary or secondary tumours +/- paraneoplastic phenomena • Haematuria, dysuria, frequency/urgency • Ureteric obstruction Ureteric obstruction Management • As for all cancers, dependent on stage and grade of tumour and co-morbidities • TCCs described as GxTy (grade/TNM stage) • Can be either curative or palliative Diagnosis/staging • Clinical diagnosis usually made at flexi cysto • TURBT (including VE or DRE) to establish tissue diagnosis, then Mitomycin • If tissue stage pT2 or greater, staging CT chest/abdo/pelvis Treatment • Superficial TCC (pT<2) – TURBT followed by regular review flexi cystoscopy – Intravesical treatment with mitomycin or bCG if high grade or multiply recurrent – Recurrent high grade disease merits consideration of cystectomy • Invasive TCC or other subtypes – Radical surgery or radiotherapy after neoadjuvant chemotherapy if cure possible – Palliative surgery/radiotherapy/medical symptom control Prognosis • Superficial TCC – excellent unless highgrade • Invasive TCC – approx 50% overall 5y/s • Metastatic – extremely poor Renal cell cancer • • • • • UK 7000 cases; 3600 deaths/year 3% all cancer Mortality is NOT declining >50% incidental findings on imaging 30% present with metastases Clinical Features • • • • Asymptomatic (>50%) Haematuria Flank Pain Mass • Metastatic/paraneoplastic Paraneoplastic Syndromes • • • • • • Anaemia (>30%) Erythrocytosis (3%) Cachexia Hepatic dysfunction Hormonal abnormalities Hypercalcaemia Metastases • • • • Lung Bone Liver Brain Management • Dependent on stage, grade & co-morbidity! • Curative vs palliative • Only curative option is surgery – Laparoscopic radical nephrectomy – Lap/open partial nephrectomy • Palliation with TKIs and mTOR antagonists Prognosis • Good if resectable primary tumour • Very poor for metastatic disease Prostate cancer • Commonest solid tumour in UK males • 35000 cases & 10000 deaths per year • Risk factors • Age, male sex • Significantly less common in oriental races Pathology • Adenocarcinoma is commonest form (95%+) • Gleason Grading system • Sum of two commonest morphologies Presentation • Asymptomatic • raised PSA/opportunistic DRE • LUTS, lymphoedema, PE/DVT, ureteric obstruction/ARF, haematuria, impotence • Bone pain, anaemia, sclerotic bone on XR Management • Dependent on stage, grade & co-morbidity! • History & Examination • PSA, U/Es, FBC • Truss-guided prostate biopsy • Isotope bone scan/MRI prostate Selecting treatment • Not all tumours warrant treatment (morbidity of treatment outweighs potential benefit to patient) • Whitmore’s conundrum – ‘Is it possible that no treatable prostate cancer requires treatment, but that all those requiring treatment are untreatable?’ Treatment options • Curative (radical) – Radical prostatectomy (open, laparoscopic, robotic) – Radical external beam radiotherapy – Brachytherapy • Palliative – – – – Watchful waiting Hormone ablation Chemotherapy Radiotherapy ‘The Third Way’ • Active surveillance – Aims to select out patients who will do badly and defer radical treatment until progression is imminent – Good evidence that rate of change of PSA correlates well with aggressiveness of tumour – Only immediate side-effect is psychological Testicular cancer • Commonest solid tumour of young men • Commoner in European populations • Exceptionally good prognosis due to effective platinum-based chemotherapy Pathology • Germ cell tumours (95%) • Seminoma, teratoma • Sertoli cell tumours • Leydig cell tumours • Lymphomas (older men) Presentation • Painless testicular lump • Pain from infarction/infection/trauma • Symptomatic metastases • Retroperitoneal lymph nodes (varicocoele) • Lungs, bones Management • Dependent on stage, grade & co-morbidity! • But • Almost all are potentially curable • Co-morbidity is uncommon in these men Assessment • History & Examination • Serum Tumour Markers • Αlpha-foetoprotein (AFP) • ß-human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) • Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) • Radical orchidectomy for histology followed by CT chest/abdo/pelvis Oncological management • Most now get chemotherapy • Platinum-based • Some also radiotherapy and retroperitoneal lymph node dissection • Vast majority are cured but need regular imaging and risk second Ca Penile cancer • Rare (in UK) • Association with HPV subtypes (cf cervical cancer) • Any suspicious lesion on glans or prepuce warrants early referral if fails to respond to steroids • Squamous tumours usually treated surgically, some role for radiotherapy/chemo Any questions?