Urothelial Carcinoma
Urothelial Carcinoma
Urothelial Carcinoma
(Transitional
Carcinoma)
Overview
What is urothelial carcinoma?
Urothelial carcinoma is cancer that starts in your urothelium, the tissue
that lines parts of your urinary system. Urothelial carcinoma accounts for
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about 90% of all cases of bladder cancer and 7% of all cases of kidney
cancer, including cancer in your renal pelvis and ureter. Bladder and
kidney cancers caused by urothelial carcinoma have similar symptoms.
They also have similar prognoses — caught early on, these cancers are
easily treated, but often come back.
In bladder cancer, abnormal urothelial cells spread from the inner lining to
other layers deep in your bladder. The abnormal cells may also spread
through your bladder wall into the fatty tissues that surround your
bladder. Left untreated, bladder cancer may grow through your bladder
walls to nearby lymph nodes and then other areas of your body, including
your bones, lungs or liver.
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Tiredness.
Low-grade fever.
Urinalysis: A test to check the color of your pee (urine) and its
contents, such as sugar, protein, blood and bacteria.
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Urine cytology: Healthcare providers examine your pee under a
microscope to check for abnormal cells. Cancer in your kidneys,
bladder or ureter may shed cancer cells into your urine.
Cancer staging
Healthcare providers use a cancer staging system to develop treatment
plans and establish prognoses or expected outcomes. Cancer staging
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describes how tumors are growing or spreading.
Cancer staging is a complicated process to complete, much less explain.
It’s understandable if you feel intimidated, confused or unnerved by a
process that seems to reduce your illness to a formula of letters and
numbers. Your providers understand why you may feel this way. If you’re
confused or concerned by what you’re hearing, ask your provider to
explain how the cancer staging system works in your situation.
Bladder cancer can be either early stage (confined to the lining of your
bladder) or invasive (penetrating your bladder wall and possibly
spreading to nearby organs or lymph nodes). Bladder cancer stages are:
Stage II: Cancer has spread to the muscle wall of your bladder.
Stage III: Cancer has spread to the fatty tissue outside of your
bladder muscle.
Stage IV: Cancer has spread from your bladder to your lymph nodes
or to other organs or bones.
Stage II: Cancer has grown but hasn’t spread from your kidney.
Stage III: Cancer has spread from your kidney to your major blood
vessels — your renal vein and inferior vena cava — or into the tissue
surrounding your kidney or to nearby lymph nodes.
Stage IV: Cancer has spread from your adrenal gland (the small gland
that sits on top of your kidney) or to distant lymph nodes or other
organs.
Stage 0: There are abnormal cells in tissue lining your renal pelvis or
ureter. This cancer stage may be called papillary carcinoma or
carcinoma in situ.
Stage 1: Cancer spreads through the lining of your renal pelvis and/or
ureter into a layer of connective tissue.
Stage II: Cancer has spread through connective tissue to your renal
pelvis and/or ureter’s layer of muscle.
Stage IV: Cancer spread to nearby organs, one or more lymph nodes,
the layer of fat around your kidney or more distant organs such as Ad
Chemotherapy.
Immunotherapy.
Radiation therapy.
Targeted therapy.
Surgery. Surgeons may remove the part of your kidney that contains
cancer. They may also remove your entire kidney.
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Cryoablation.
Radiofrequency ablation.
Renal pelvis and/or ureter cancer treatment
Surgery. Surgeons remove the part of your renal pelvis or ureter that
contains cancer.
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Prevention
How can I reduce my risk of developing
urothelial carcinoma in my urinary
system?
You may reduce your risk of developing these cancers by not smoking
cigarettes and avoiding certain chemicals.
Outlook / Prognosis
What is the life expectancy for urothelial Ad
carcinoma?
Urothelial carcinoma is cancer that starts in cells that line your bladder,
your kidneys, renal pelvis and ureter. While the same cancerous cell
causes these cancers, each cancer type has different prognoses or
expected outcomes.
Living With
How do I take care of myself?
If cancer is caught in early stages, healthcare providers can often cure
urothelial carcinoma that affects your urinary system. Unfortunately,
these types of cancer often come back. If you’ve been treated for one of
these cancers, you should do your best to be vigilant about follow-up
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care.
When should I see my healthcare provider?
You should see your healthcare provider any time you have changes in
your body that may indicate urothelial cancer in your urinary system has
come back.
Medically Reviewed
References
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