Abstract

BackgroundTraumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) is also a combat-related injury that is increasing in modern warfare. The aim of this work is to inform medical experts regarding the different course of bladder cancer in able-bodied patients compared with SCI patients based on the latest medical scientific knowledge, and to present decision-making aids for the assessment of bladder cancer as a late sequela of traumatic SCI.MethodsA study conducted between January 1998 and December 2019 in the BG Trauma Hospital Hamburg formed the basis for the decision-making aids. Urinary bladder cancer was diagnosed in 40 out of 7396 treated outpatient and inpatient SCI patients. General patient information, latency period, age at initial diagnosis, type of bladder management and survival of SCI patients with bladder cancer were collected and analysed. T category, grading and tumour entity in these patients were compared with those in the general population. Relevant bladder cancer risk factors in SCI patients were analysed. Furthermore, relevant published literature was taken into consideration.ResultsInitial diagnosis of urinary bladder cancer in SCI patients occurs at a mean age of 56.4 years (SD ± 10.7 years), i.e., approximately 20 years earlier as compared with the general population. These bladder cancers are significantly more frequently muscle invasive (i.e., T category ≥ T2) and present a higher grade at initial diagnosis. Furthermore, SCI patients show a significantly higher proportion of the more aggressive squamous cell carcinoma than that of the general population in areas not endemic for the tropical disease schistosomiasis. Consequently, the survival time is extremely unfavourable. A very important finding, for practical reasons is that, in the Hamburg study as well as in the literature, urinary bladder cancer is more frequently observed after 10 years or more of SCI. Based on these findings, a matrix was compiled where the various influencing factors, either for or against the recognition of an association between SCI and urinary bladder cancer, were weighted according to their relevance.ConclusionsThe results showed that urinary bladder cancer in SCI patients differs considerably from that in able-bodied patients. The presented algorithm is an important aid in everyday clinical practice for assessing the correlation between SCI and bladder cancer.

Highlights

  • Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) is a combat-related injury that is increasing in modern warfare

  • Twenty SCI cases were due to accidents that were covered by the Statutory Accident Insurance of Germany, including workplace or commuting accidents; 17 were due to accidents not covered by Statutory Accident Insurance of Germany including private accidents; and 3 were due to other injuries

  • The observed tumour entities, T categories and gradings of the 40 SCI patients with bladder cancer are shown in Table 1 and were compared with results from bladder cancer patients in the general population in Germany (RKI data 1999–2016) (Fig. 4)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) is a combat-related injury that is increasing in modern warfare. The aim of this work is to inform medical experts regarding the different course of bladder cancer in able-bodied patients compared with SCI patients based on the latest medical scientific knowledge, and to present decisionmaking aids for the assessment of bladder cancer as a late sequela of traumatic SCI. Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) is a severe combatrelated injury that is increasing in modern warfare. At initial diagnosis, these tumours are commonly already more aggressive and more advanced These findings, which have been described in the international literature [3, 4], have been until today, due to a lack of recommendations for medical experts in guidelines, not applied in medical assessments of patients with SCI

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call