Haematuria has a prevalence of 0.1% to 2.6%. Potential diagnoses may include infection, kidney stones, trauma, exercise or spurious causes, such as foods, drugs or menstruation, and a tumour. Approximately 20% of patients with haematuria have a urological tumour, with a further 20% found to have a significant underlying pathology. Haematuria is subsequently known as the 'classic presentation' of bladder cancer with 70-80% of patients experiencing painless, gross (visible) haematuria. However, in all cases of visible haematuria, a tumour should be suspected until proven otherwise. A patient with visible haematuria requires urgent, stringent investigation, warranting specialist assessment and subsequent selective referral through a series of patient-centred investigations at a haematuria clinic. One-stop clinics have been shown to improve the patient experience in early diagnosis of potentially life-threatening conditions. Yet despite morbidity and mortality from bladder cancer increasing, the haematuria service has remained largely unchanged for several decades. This paper will discuss the tests and investigations that need to be undertaken in an individual with either visible or non-visible haematuria, and outline the care that is needed to support patients through the investigation process, with special focus on bladder tumour.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/bjon.2014.23.Sup9.S28 | DOI Listing |
Nephrology (Carlton)
January 2025
School of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
The symptom of macroscopic or 'visible' haematuria can cause significant patient distress, largely due to its' potential association with urinary tract malignancy, infection or glomerular disease. This lesson from practice describes the case of a 19-year-old female patient for whom the cause of red/brown urinary discolouration was found to relate to a reaction between renally excreted mesalazine and domestic bleach in the toilet bowel. Recognition of this phenomenon in patients taking mesalazine for inflammatory colitis is important to minimise patient distress and unnecessary investigation for a urinary tract cause.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacoeconomics
January 2025
Sheffield Centre for Health and Related Research (SCHARR), School of Medicine and Population Health, The University of Sheffield, Regent Court, 30 Regent Street, Sheffield, UK.
Background: Testing high-risk populations for non-visible haematuria may enable earlier detection of bladder cancer, potentially decreasing mortality. This research aimed to assess the cost-effectiveness of urine dipstick screening for bladder cancer in high-risk populations in England.
Methods: A microsimulation model developed in R software was calibrated to national incidence data by age, sex and stage, and validated against mortality data.
Pediatr Med Chir
January 2025
Department of Pediatric Surgery and Pediatric Minimally Invasive Surgery and New Technologies, San Bortolo Hospital, Vicenza.
Schistosomiasis is a tropical infection endemic to developing nations that can result in chronic liver damage, renal failure, infertility, and bladder cancer. Genitourinary localization is marked by dysuria, visible hematuria, and urinary obstruction. We present the case of a 17-year-old male adolescent from a rural area of Central Africa, who arrived in Italy two years prior, exhibiting hematuria and urinary symptoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
November 2024
Urology, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, Birmingham, GBR.
The commonest malignancy of the urinary tract is bladder cancer, with the commonest presentation being painless visible haematuria. Just like other malignancies, it can spread, commonly to surrounding tissues like the prostate, seminal vesicles, and vagina, distantly to lymph nodes, lungs, liver, and bone, and less commonly to the skin and subcutaneous tissues. This is a case of a man with muscle-invasive bladder cancer who underwent radical radiotherapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBladder (San Franc)
November 2024
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Brantford General Hospital, Brantford, Ontario N3R 1G9, Canada.
Background: Malakoplakia is a rare granulomatous disease that commonly involves the genitourinary tract with the urinary bladder being the most frequently affected site. It is characterized by histiocytes containing distinct basophilic calcified inclusions called Michaelis-Gutmann bodies. It is believed to result from abnormally functioning macrophages, with inclusions representing calcifications around incompletely digested bacteria.
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