A 74-year-old male was referred to our hospital due to microhematuria that was pointed out at his health check-up. Cystoscopy showed many papillary bladder tumors under 5 mm in size. Intravenous pyelography also showed deformity of the right kidney and shadow defects in the left renal pelvis. Abdominal computed tomography revealed an 8 cm tumor invading the renal vein in the right kidney, and a 3 cm tumor in the left renal pelvis. Prostate biopsy was performed with PSA 3.4 ng/ml, and he was also diagnosed with prostate carcinoma. First, he received right radical nephrectomy, and secondly left nephroureterectomy and cystectomy. Our case should be called triple cancer because bladder cancer was thought to be daughter tumor of renal pelvic tumor. This is, to our knowledge, the 11th case report that occurred in the urinary tact, and the first case that needed total resection of urinary tract.
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