[Oncological relevance of neuro-urological diseases].
Ralf BothigWolfgang SchöpsBirgitt KowaldKlaus GolkaPublished in: Aktuelle Urologie (2024)
Apart from a few exceptions, there is currently little scientific evidence on the oncological relevance of neuro-urological diseases. Most research has been conducted into the association between long-term spinal cord injury with its consequences for the lower urinary tract and the occurrence of bladder cancer. These cancers differ in many ways from bladder cancers in patients without spinal cord injury: patients are 20 years younger on average, tumours are very often already muscle-invasive and poorly differentiated with a high proportion of squamous cell carcinomas, and the prognosis is poor. These characteristics also occur in spinal cord injury patients without permanent catheter drainage of the urinary bladder. Although the pathophysiological association has not been clarified in detail, the presence of a neurogenic bladder appears to be the decisive link between spinal cord injury and the occurrence of bladder cancer. Pathological pressure conditions in the urinary bladder and frequent urinary tract infections or asymptomatic bacteriuria resulting from neurogenic lower urinary tract dysfunction could be the decisive pathophysiological factors. In this respect, urinary bladder cancer in persons with a chronic spinal cord injury represents a model tumour after denervation. The clinically important question of screening requires future interdisciplinary research approaches.
Keyphrases
- spinal cord injury
- urinary tract
- end stage renal disease
- spinal cord
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- neuropathic pain
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- urinary tract infection
- prostate cancer
- oxidative stress
- rectal cancer
- skeletal muscle
- patient reported outcomes
- high grade
- patient reported
- minimally invasive
- ultrasound guided
- current status