Reader's Digest Asia Pacific

BEATING BLADDER CANCER

THE KEY IS EARLY DETECTION – AND THAT’S UP TO YOU

- BY Lina Zeldovich

When Frances Dobrowolsk­i noticed blood in her urine in August 2019, she didn’t think much of it. But then it happened again, and since she was scheduled to see her doctor in two weeks, she mentioned that strange fact. Her doctor immediatel­y referred her to a urologist, and it proved life-saving for the retiree and grandmothe­r. When her urologist threaded a tube with a tiny video camera into her urethra and bladder (a cystoscopy), she immediatel­y saw the cancerous tumours. Frances, who was able to watch the procedure on a screen, also saw the tumours – they were growing from her bladder walls into the bladder. “It was a lot of cancer,” she says.

Frances also learned that smoking could have been the cause. “I quit 13 years ago, but I smoked for 40 years, two packs a day,” she says. “I thought if I got anything, it would be lung cancer, but I got bladder cancer instead.”

Frances had surgery to remove the tumours within days, but on the follow-up test a few weeks later, more cancer showed up on the screen, so she had to undergo surgery a second time. She also started having chemothera­py drug infusions into her bladder once a week for six weeks to kill the remaining tumour cells.

When her next check-up revealed another tumour, she needed more infusions. “But because I saw my doctor as soon as I spotted symptoms,” she says, “and because the tumours aren’t growing into my muscles, my prognosis is good. I stay optimistic.”

BLADDER CANCER is among the top ten most common cancer types in the world, with approximat­ely 550,000 new cases annually. In Australia, it is estimated that over 3000 new cases of bladder cancer will be diagnosed this year.

Many bladder cancers are highly treatable. The key to beating it is early detection – and that’s where things get tricky. Unlike with prostate or breast cancers, there’s no test that can detect an elevated risk of bladder cancer, so patients have to spot the troubling signs themselves.

SYMPTOMS

The most telling sign of bladder cancer is the sudden appearance of blood in urine, a symptom called haematuria, which Frances had. The moment you see it, you should call your doctor right away, rather than waiting for it to disappear. Haematuria may not be accompanie­d by any pain, so some people wait for it to go away, losing precious time.

WHEN YOU QUIT SMOKING, THE CHANCE OF BLADDER CANCERS DEVELOPING OR COMING BACK DECREASES

In addition to blood in the urine, symptoms may include changes in urination, such as a burning sensation, pain and increase in frequency. These symptoms can be deceptive because people may attribute them to age or an overactive bladder, and ignore them. And when they finally share their concerns with their GPs, the doctors sometimes mistake them as urinary tract infections (UTIs).

RISK FACTORS, GENDER & AGE

Smoking is the single most important risk factor in developing bladder cancer, according to research.

When inhaled, the smoke toxins pass through the lungs and percolate through the bloodstrea­m until they are filtered out of the body by the kidneys, mixing into the urine. That toxin-high urine can remain in the bladder for hours, essentiall­y poisoning its walls.

“When patients quit smoking,” says urologist Dr Antoine G. van der Heijden, “the chances of cancer coming back or evolving will decrease, and survival will increase.”

Men are three times more likely than women to be diagnosed with bladder cancer. According to the Cancer Council, about one in every 108 men will be diagnosed with bladder cancer before the age of 75, making it one of the top ten most common cancers in men.

For women, the chance is about one in 394. However, even though bladder cancer affects fewer women, their survival chances are slightly lower than men’s – and there might be several reasons for that, experts say.

The disease may progress faster in women because their bladder walls are thinner, allowing certain tumours to spread more easily and invade other organs. Hormones such as oestrogen might play a role, too. And because women are more susceptibl­e to urinary tract infections, doctors of ten misinterpr­et their symptoms.

Most women with cancer whose f irst symptom is blood in their urine are initially misclassif­ied as having a UTI, says urologist Dr Renate Pichler. So, she says, if you have been treated with several rounds of antibiotic­s and your infection isn’t subsiding, that’s not normal. It’s time to see the urologist and do a bladder cancer check.

Age doesn’t play a big role in bladder cancer, but the average age of diagnosis is 73. “The highest incidence is seen in the age group 70 to 75,” Dr van der Heijden says.

ABOUT 75 PER CENT OF PEOPLE DEVELOP LESS-AGGRESSIVE NON-MUSCLE-INVASIVE BLADDER CANCER

TYPES OF BLADDER CANCER

There are important difference­s between types of bladder cancer. Most patients (including Frances Dobrowolsk­i) – about 75 per cent – develop less-aggressive urothelial carcinomas, which start in the urothelial cells that line the inside of the bladder. Most of these tumours are slender, finger-like protrusion­s, growing from the bladder’s inner surface and towards its hollow centre rather than into its walls and out of the bladder

into the surroundin­g tissues. Dr van der Heijden adds that some types of urothelial carcinomas can be more aggressive than others, so doctors differenti­ate them by grades that range from zero to four, with higher numbers being more invasive.

The remaining 25 per cent of patients have more aggressive cancers. Carcinoma in situ, or CIS, begins as a non-invasive tumour but it tends to grow and spread more quickly and has a higher chance of recurrence. Nearly half of CIS patients will eventually develop a muscle-invasive tumour, says Dr van der Heijden.

Certain rare types of bladder cancers can be muscle-invasive from the start. These are very aggressive, but each constitute­s only about one per cent of all bladder cancer cases. Patients’ prognosis and treatment depend on their tumours’ type and stage.

DIAGNOSIS & TREATMENTS

As Frances discovered, to diagnose the cancer urologists perform a cystoscopy. This allows the doctor to view the bladder’s inner lining on a computer screen and get a sample for a biopsy. Sometimes doctors also order a fluorescen­ce cystoscopy, which uses a drug activated by blue light to find abnormal cells. Or, the doctor may order a CT scan or MRI with a contrast dye that highlights tumours, allowing the doctor to determine the exact type and stage of the cancer present.

Non-muscle-invasive cancers, as in Frances’s case, are removed by a procedure called a transureth­ral resection of the bladder tumour. A thin

instrument is inserted through the urethra and into the bladder. It has a wire loop at the end that removes the tumour. An electrode or laser is then used to destroy remaining abnormal cells, which may not necessaril­y be part of the tumour.

After surgery, doctors may also use a catheter to inject a liquid drug directly into the bladder to kill any remaining cancer cells. This type of treatment is called intravesic­al therapy. More aggressive cancers might require mult iple appl ications administer­ed over months and even years, with the exact process designed to address the patient’s specific case.

Patients must also have regular cystoscopy check-ups after surgery to make sure the cancer doesn’t return, because urothelial carcinomas tend to grow again. But with careful monitoring, future cancers can be prevented from taking hold.

Piet van Klaveren* can attest to that. His bladder cancer fight began in 1996. It was detected because of blood in his urine – which he ignored at first. “Like most men, I postponed it, hoping it would go away,” recalls the 73-year-old pharmacist. When he finally mentioned it to his GP a few months later, he was immediatel­y referred to a urologist who diagnosed him with a non-muscle-invasive urothelial carcinoma – so his prognosis was good.

Piet had surgery, but a year later the cancer came back. This time, after scooping it out, Piet’s doctor used intravesic­al therapy, injecting a chemothera­py drug into his bladder over the course of a year. Piet remained cancer-free for a decade until in 2011 he spotted blood in his urine once again. And once again he had surgery followed by intravesic­al therapy over four years.

“I’m currently free of cancer,” he says, noting that regular surveillan­ce is key to staying that way. “It’s checked twice a year with a cystoscopy.”

Dr Pichler says that patients with early- stage non- muscle- invasive cancers can also receive immunother­apy that is administer­ed via intervesic­al therapy that stimulates the immune system to attack cancer.

In the case of muscle- invasive cancers and tumours that can’t be stopped by these means, doctors may recommend radical cystectomy – removing the bladder entirely. Then they can either construct a conduit that diverts urine from the kidneys into a small pouch worn on the >>

TO DIAGNOSE THE CANCER, UROLOGISTS USE A PROCEDURE THAT LETS THEM SEE INSIDE THE BLADDER

*Name changed to protect patient privacy

>> body that patients empty manually, or they can reconstruc­t the bladder entirely, from a piece of the patient’s small intestine.

“Clinicians need to choose the right option for the right patients,” Dr Pichler says.

The key to staying healthy after treatment is regular check-ups and cystoscopy tests, experts say. Usually, urologists do them every three months for the first two years, every six months for the next three years, and once a year af ter that, says Dr Pichler.

For those spotting blood in their urine for the first time or having sudden onset of recurring UTIs – especially after never having them before – these are reasons for a thorough urological exam, Dr van der Heijden says. Even having an actual UTI doesn’t rule out a tumour entirely, because the two may co-occur.

Keep this advice from Dr van der Heijden in mind: “In women who suddenly have recurrent UTIs, analysis by a urologist is mandatory. In men, a single UTI is already a reason to be referred to a urologist.”

THE KEY TO STAYING CANCER-FREE AFTER TREATMENT IS REGULAR CHECK-UPS AND CYSTOSCOPY TESTS

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 ??  ?? Frances Dobrowolsk­i’s cancer was caught early, and she remains optimistic about her outcome
Frances Dobrowolsk­i’s cancer was caught early, and she remains optimistic about her outcome

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