| Literature DB >> 36042998 |
Sattam A Halaseh1, Shahed Halaseh2, Yaman Alali3, Mohannad E Ashour4, Mohammad J Alharayzah5.
Abstract
Bladder cancer is any tumor that originates in the urinary bladder. It is the most prevalent tumor of the urinary system, with urothelial carcinoma being the most prevalent histologic subtype. It impacts both men and women. The development of bladder cancer was influenced by several risk factors, including advanced age, male sex, cigarette smoking, and occupational and environmental toxin exposure. Bladder tumors may manifest as gross or microscopic hematuria, which is assessed using cystoscopy, urine analysis, and other specialized tests. Due to the large number of cases related to environmental causes, bladder cancer is an appropriate target for public health preventative interventions. Cessation of smoking, adequate occupational safety procedures, diet, weight loss, and schistosomiasis prevention may mitigate the rising global incidence.Entities:
Keywords: bladder ca; etiology; smoking tobacco; urinary bladder ca; urothelial cell carcinoma
Year: 2022 PMID: 36042998 PMCID: PMC9411696 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.27330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Bladder cancer incidence rates by region and gender in 2020.
Source: reference [1].
Total global bladder cancer mortality in 2020.
Source: reference [1].
| Rank | Country | Number |
| World | 212,536 | |
| 1 | Egypt | 6,170 |
| 2 | Tunisia | 822 |
| 3 | Libya | 242 |
| 4 | Poland | 5,026 |
| 5 | Mali | 426 |
| 6 | Slovakia | 629 |
| 7 | Latvia | 271 |
| 8 | São Tomé and Príncipe | 5 |
| 9 | Algeria | 1,861 |
| 10 | Serbia | 931 |