AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients with spinal cord injuries are at a higher risk for aggressive bladder cancer, often diagnosed at advanced stages; this study aims to enhance clinical understanding of this issue.
  • A thorough literature review identified 254 relevant articles from databases like PubMed and Web of Science, revealing higher bladder cancer incidence and mortality rates in spinal cord injury patients compared to the general population, with squamous cell carcinoma being the most common type.
  • The review emphasizes the importance of long-term urinary infections, catheterization, and specific molecules (NO, MiR 1949, Rb 1) in understanding the disease's pathogenesis, while noting the scarcity of research on molecular mechanisms.

Article Abstract

Background: Patients with spinal cord injury have a relatively high risk for bladder cancer and often complicated with bladder cancer in advanced stages, and the degree of aggressiveness of malignancy is high. Most of the literature is based on disease clinical features while, our study reviews the clinical characteristics and molecular mechanisms of spinal cord injury patients with bladder cancer, so that it might help clinicians better recognize and manage these patients.

Method: We searched PubMed, Web of Science and Embase, using retrieval type like ("Neurogenic Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction" OR "Spinal cord injury" OR "Spinal Cord Trauma") AND ("bladder cancer" OR "bladder neoplasm" OR "bladder carcinoma" OR "Urinary Bladder Neoplasms" OR "Bladder Tumor"). In Web of Science, the retrieval type was searched as "Topic", and in PubMed and Embase, as "All Field". The methodological quality of eligible studies and their risk of bias were assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale. This article is registered in PROSPERO with the CBD number: CRD42024508514.

Result: In WOS, we searched 219 related papers, in PubMed, 122 and in Embase, 363. Thus, a total of 254 articles were included after passing the screening, within a time range between 1960 and 2023. A comprehensive analysis of the data showed that the mortality and incidence rates of bladder cancer in spinal cord injury patients were higher than that of the general population, and the most frequent pathological type was squamous cell carcinoma. In parallel to long-term urinary tract infection and indwelling catheterization, the role of molecules such as NO, MiR 1949 and Rb 1. was found to be crucial pathogenetically.

Conclusion: This review highlights the risk of bladder cancer in SCI patients, comprehensively addressing the clinical characteristics and related molecular mechanisms. However, given that there are few studies on the molecular mechanisms of bladder cancer in spinal cord injury, further research is needed to expand the understanding of the disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11110351PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12894-024-01457-0DOI Listing

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