AI Article Synopsis

  • - A 48-year-old man diagnosed with invasive bladder cancer underwent treatment including chemotherapy and surgery, resulting in an ileal conduit diversion.
  • - At age 53, the cancer recurred in the upper urinary tract, leading to the removal of the urinary tract, and an examination found urothelial carcinoma in the ileal conduit.
  • - After a local recurrence three years later, he received combined therapy with chemotherapy and radiotherapy, continuing with maintenance chemotherapy for ongoing metastatic tumors, with only 12 similar cases reported in medical literature.

Article Abstract

A 48-year-old man presented complaining of lower abdominal pain, and was diagnosed with invasive bladder cancer. After neoadjuvant chemotherapy, cystoprostatourethrectomy and ileal conduit diversion were performed. At 53 years of age, bladder cancer recurred in the upper urinary tract and he underwent complete urinary tract extirpation. Histological examination revealed an urothelial carcinoma in an ileal conduit. Three years later, a local recurrence led to combined modality therapy including chemotherapy and radiotherapy. He is receiving maintenance chemotherapy for metastatic tumors. Urothelial carcinoma arising in an ileal conduit after radical cystectomy for bladder cancer is infrequently reported. To our knowledge, only 12 cases, including ours, have been reported.

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