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Urothelial Carcinoma · Haematuria

Bladder Cancer - Diagnosis & Treatment

Blood in your urine is the key early warning sign of bladder cancer. When caught early, bladder cancer is highly treatable - often without removing the bladder. Do not wait for blood to reappear. Get assessed this week.

Urgent - blood in urine All cancer surgery

⚠️ Blood in urine must be investigated - even once. Painless visible haematuria is the most common presentation of bladder cancer. Do not wait for it to reappear, and do not assume it is due to infection or stones without investigation. WhatsApp +91 78382 86336 to be seen within 48–72 hours.

Bladder cancer treatment

Understanding the diagnosis

Superficial vs muscle-invasive - why it matters

The single most important factor in bladder cancer management is whether the tumour has grown into the muscle wall of the bladder. This determines whether the bladder can be preserved.

Non-Muscle-Invasive (NMIBC)

Stages: Ta (confined to inner lining), T1 (into submucosa), CIS (flat high-grade)

  • Bladder is preserved
  • Treated by TURBT + BCG or intravesical chemotherapy
  • 50–70% recurrence rate - lifelong cystoscopy surveillance essential
  • Excellent prognosis if high-risk tumours managed correctly
  • Progression to muscle-invasive disease if untreated or undertreated

Muscle-Invasive (MIBC)

Stage: T2 or beyond - tumour has grown into the detrusor muscle

  • Bladder removal (radical cystectomy) is the standard treatment
  • Neoadjuvant chemotherapy before surgery improves survival
  • Bladder-sparing (TURBT + radiotherapy + chemo) for selected fit patients
  • Surgery involves creating a new route for urine (urinary diversion)
  • 5-year survival 50–60% for T2; lower for more advanced stages

From symptom to diagnosis

The bladder cancer investigation pathway

1
Haematuria - first presentationAny visible or microscopic blood in urine triggers an urgent urology referral. This is the gatekeeping symptom. Never normalise it.
2
Initial investigationsUrine cytology (looking for cancer cells shed into the urine). Ultrasound KUB (assesses kidneys, bladder wall, post-void residue). Urine routine and culture (to exclude infection - but infection does not rule out cancer).
3
CystoscopyA flexible cystoscope (3 mm camera) is passed into the bladder under local anaesthetic gel. The entire bladder lining is inspected. Takes 5–10 minutes. If a lesion is seen, it is biopsied or resected under general anaesthesia (TURBT) at a separate sitting. If cystoscopy is clear - CT urogram to assess upper urinary tract (kidneys and ureters).
4
TURBTTransurethral resection of the visible tumour under general or spinal anaesthesia. All tumour tissue is sent for histopathology - this gives the diagnosis, grade (low/high), and depth of invasion (Ta, T1, or T2+). A second TURBT (re-TURBT) 4–6 weeks later is recommended for T1 high-grade tumours to ensure complete resection.
5
Staging CT scanFor muscle-invasive tumours or high-risk non-muscle-invasive tumours - CT chest, abdomen, and pelvis to assess for lymph node spread and distant metastases. MRI pelvis may be added for local staging.
6
MDT discussion and treatment planningAll cases of bladder cancer are discussed at a multidisciplinary team (MDT) meeting including urology, medical oncology, and radiotherapy to agree on the treatment plan. The plan is discussed with the patient in full.

Treatment

Treatment options by stage

All stages - diagnostic + therapeutic

TURBT

Transurethral Resection of Bladder Tumour. First-line treatment for all bladder tumours. Removes visible tumour through the urethra using an electrical loop. Also provides histopathology specimen for grading and staging. Day-case to 1-night stay.

High-risk NMIBC · after TURBT

BCG Immunotherapy

Weekly BCG instillations into the bladder for 6 weeks (induction), then maintenance for up to 3 years. Dramatically reduces recurrence and prevents progression to muscle-invasive disease. Gold-standard for high-risk non-muscle-invasive tumours and CIS.

Low / intermediate risk NMIBC

Intravesical Chemotherapy

Single post-operative instillation of mitomycin C given within 24 hours of TURBT. Destroys circulating tumour cells and reduces early recurrence. For intermediate-risk, a course of instillations may be given. Alternative to BCG for lower-risk tumours.

Muscle-invasive bladder cancer

Radical Cystectomy

Surgical removal of the bladder. Gold standard for T2+ bladder cancer and BCG-refractory high-risk NMIBC. Dr. Nitin performs robotic radical cystectomy at Apollo Hospital Gurugram. Urinary diversion (ileal conduit, neobladder, or continent pouch) created at the same operation.

Organ preservation · selected cases

Trimodality Therapy

TURBT + radiotherapy + concurrent chemotherapy. Bladder-sparing alternative to cystectomy for selected fit patients with muscle-invasive disease who wish to preserve their bladder. 5-year survival comparable to cystectomy in carefully selected patients. Requires intensive surveillance.

All non-muscle-invasive · lifelong

Cystoscopy Surveillance

Regular flexible cystoscopy to detect recurrence early - when it is still easily treatable. Schedule varies by risk group but continues for life for high-risk disease. Urine cytology and CT urogram added at intervals. The most important part of bladder cancer management.

Video Education

Watch Dr. Nitin on Bladder Cancer

TURBT, surveillance, cystectomy - what each stage means for you

Bladder Cancer Diagnosis & Surgery – Dr. Nitin Shrivastava

Bladder Cancer Diagnosis & Surgery

Uro-Oncology Cancer Treatment – Dr. Nitin Shrivastava

Uro-Oncology Cancer Treatment

Frequently asked questions

Bladder cancer - common questions answered

The most important early sign is haematuria - blood in the urine. This may be visible (frank haematuria - pink, red or brown urine) or microscopic (detected on a urine test when the urine looks normal). Painless visible haematuria is the presenting symptom in 80–85% of bladder cancer cases. It is always abnormal and must be investigated. Other symptoms include: frequent urination, burning sensation when passing urine (without infection), urgency, and in advanced disease - pelvic or bone pain, or inability to urinate. Because bladder cancer causes these symptoms early, it is often diagnosed while still curable.

No - most haematuria is not cancer. Common causes include kidney stones, urinary infection, benign prostatic enlargement (BPH), strenuous exercise, and trauma. However, bladder cancer and kidney cancer are important causes that must be excluded. The key principle is this: haematuria must be investigated every time, regardless of age, gender, or likelihood - even if there is an obvious alternative explanation like a UTI. Investigations include urine cytology, ultrasound KUB, and cystoscopy. A CT urogram may be added to assess the upper urinary tract. Do not wait for blood to reappear - investigate the first episode.

TURBT stands for Transurethral Resection of Bladder Tumour - it is both the initial diagnostic procedure and the first treatment for bladder cancer. A resectoscope (a thin telescope with an electrical loop) is passed through the urethra into the bladder under general or spinal anaesthesia. The tumour is resected (shaved away in layers) and the specimens are sent to pathology. TURBT tells us: (1) whether the lesion is cancer, (2) what type and grade, and (3) how deeply it has invaded the bladder wall. No skin incisions are made. Hospital stay is usually 1–2 nights. A urethral catheter is left for 1–2 days. Most patients return to work within 1–2 weeks.

This distinction determines whether the bladder can be saved. Superficial (non-muscle-invasive) bladder cancer: Stage Ta, T1, or CIS (carcinoma in situ). The tumour is limited to the inner lining or submucosa - it has not grown into the muscle wall. Treated by TURBT + intravesical therapy (BCG or chemotherapy instilled into the bladder). The bladder is preserved. Recurrence is common (50–70% over 5 years) so regular cystoscopy surveillance is essential. Muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC): Stage T2 or beyond. The tumour has grown into the detrusor muscle. Standard treatment is radical cystectomy (removal of the bladder) with or without neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Bladder-sparing trimodality therapy (TURBT + radiotherapy + chemotherapy) is an alternative for selected patients.

BCG (Bacillus Calmette-Guérin) intravesical therapy is an immunotherapy instilled directly into the bladder after TURBT for high-risk non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer. BCG is a weakened form of the tuberculosis bacterium that triggers a local immune response in the bladder wall, destroying remaining tumour cells and preventing recurrence. The standard regimen is 6 weekly instillations (induction course) followed by 3-weekly maintenance courses at 3, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, and 36 months. BCG significantly reduces recurrence and progression to muscle-invasive disease. Common side effects include urinary frequency, urgency, and mild flu-like symptoms after instillations.

Radical cystectomy is the surgical removal of the bladder (and prostate in men, or uterus and front wall of vagina in women). It is the standard treatment for muscle-invasive bladder cancer and for high-risk non-muscle-invasive disease that has failed BCG. When the bladder is removed, a new way to store and pass urine must be created - this is called urinary diversion. Options: (1) Ileal conduit - the most common - a short segment of bowel is used to create a stoma through which urine drains into an external bag. (2) Orthotopic neobladder - bowel is fashioned into a new bladder and connected to the urethra; the patient passes urine normally (with some technique adaptation). (3) Continent cutaneous diversion - an internal pouch emptied by catheterisation through the skin. The right option depends on cancer stage, patient fitness, and preference. Dr. Nitin performs robotic radical cystectomy at Apollo Hospital Gurugram.

Bladder cancer has a high recurrence rate - 50–70% of non-muscle-invasive tumours will recur within 5 years. Regular cystoscopy is therefore essential for life after treatment. The standard surveillance schedule: for low-risk disease - cystoscopy at 3 months, then annually for 5 years. For intermediate-risk - every 3 months for 2 years, then every 6 months for 3 years, then annually. For high-risk - every 3 months for 2 years, every 6 months for 3 years, then annually for life. CT urogram is added at intervals to check the upper tracts. Urine cytology at each visit detects microscopic cancer cells. Missing surveillance appointments significantly worsens outcomes - recurrence caught early is almost always treatable.

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