Epidemiology
Urothelial cancer:
- is uncommon before 50 years of age
- is most frequent in incidence at 65 years of age
- is more common in males by a factor of 3:1(1)
- bladder cancer is the seventh most common cancer in the UK. It is 3-4 times more common in men than in women. In the UK in 2011, it was the fourth most common cancer in men fand the thirteenth most common in women (2)
- 10,399 people diagnosed with bladder cancer and 5081 deaths from bladder cancer in 2011
- majority of cases occur in people aged over 60
- main risk factor for bladder cancer is increasing age, but smoking and exposure to some industrial chemicals also increase risk
- 95% affect the bladder; 5% affect the upper tracts
- in 90% of cases, presentation is with macroscopic haematuria (1)
- 5-10% of patients present with microscopic haematuria
- is four times as common as renal adenocarcinoma
- has a 20 times more common incidence in paraplegics
- is common in industrialised countries
- is uncommon in the developing world except in bilharzial areas
Note that both microscopic and macroscopic haematuria, when caused by a urothelial cancer are intermittent. Therefore repeat urine testing can be negative for haematuria in the presence of a tumour (1).
Reference:
- (1) Referral Guidelines for Suspected Cancer (April 2000). NHS Executive.
- (2) NICE (February 2015). Bladder cancer: diagnosis and management of bladder cancer
Create an account to add page annotations
Annotations allow you to add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation. E.g. a website or number. This information will always show when you visit this page.