Title: Epidemiology of Bladder Cancer in Individuals with Spinal Injury
1Epidemiology of Bladder Cancer in Individuals
with Spinal Injury
- Suzanne L. Groah, MD, MSPH
2Part 1 Bladder Cancer Incidence
3Bladder Cancer Epidemiology
- 5th most common cancer
- 12th leading cause of cancer mortality
- Adjusted yearly incidence 17.0 per 100,000
- 54,400 new cases per year
- Males at greater risk
- Majority are transitional cell carcinoma
4Risk Factors for Bladder Cancer
- Smoking
- Male gender
- Aromatic amines
- Schistosomiasis
- UTI
5Hypotheses
- Incidence of bladder cancer is higher in SCI than
in the general population - Indwelling catheter use is associated with
bladder cancer in SCI - 3 There is an increasing risk of bladder cancer
with longer duration of IDC use
6Part 1 Design Retrospective Cohort
7Methods - Stratification According to Bladder
Management
8Methods - Analyses
- Chi-square
- Survival analysis
- Kaplan-Meier
- Regression model
- Cox proportional hazards
- Statistical significance
- p lt 0.05
- 95 confidence intervals
- Relative risk
- Adjustment
- SMR
- Attributable risk
9Results
10Demographics
data presented in years
11Demographics
12Comparison to General PopulationSMRMales
13Risk of Bladder Cancer
- Age-adjusted rate of bladder cancer (per 100,000)
- IDC - 77.0
- Multi - 56.1
- NIDC - 25.1
- Age-adjusted RR 4.9 (95 CI, 1.3 13.8)
- Attributable risk percent due to IDC 64.8
- Attributable risk percent in all SCI 55.8
14Cumulative Incidence of Bladder Cancer
Wilcoxan lt 0.05
15Cumulative Incidence of Bladder Cancer
Wilcoxan lt 0.05
16Attributable Risk due to Bladder Cancer
17Uncontrolled Confounders?
18Summary of Smoking Status
19Indirect Adjustment for Smoking
20Part 1 Conclusions
- Incidence of bladder cancer is higher in SCI than
in the general population - Indwelling catheter use is associated with
bladder cancer in SCI - The risk of bladder cancer increases with
increasing duration of indwelling catheter use
21Evidence for Causality
- Strength of association
- Biologic plausibility
- Consistency with other knowledge
- Temporal relationship
- Dose-response association
- Alternate explanations
- Cessation of exposure
- Replication of findings
- Specificity of association
22Part 2 Bladder Cancer Mortality
23Epidemiology of Bladder Cancer Mortality
- Adjusted risk 3.2 per 100,000
- Associated with age
- gt50 deaths occur in 70 year olds
- Mortality related to stage at diagnosis
- Superficial 5-yr survival 90
- Invasive 5-yr survival lt50
24Hypotheses
- Bladder cancer mortality is heightened in SCI
compared with the general population - 2 Compared with other bladder management methods,
IDC use is associated with heightened BC
mortality - 3 The risk of BC mortality increases with
increasing duration of IDC use
25Part 2 Retrospective Cohort
26Bladder Cancer Mortality
27Risks
- IDC age-adjusted BC mortality 51.2/100,000 p-y
- Multi age-adjusted BC mortality 31.5/100,000 p-y
- SMR SCI vs. SEER 70.9 95 CI 36.4-124.0
- SMR IDC vs. SEER 127.9 95 CI 61.2-235.2
28Bladder Cancer Mortality by Age
29Proportional Mortality Due to Bladder Cancer
30Survival After Bladder Cancer Diagnosis
- Of those dying due to BC, majority of death
occurred in lt1 year - Survival range .4 3.3 years
31Part 2 Conclusions
- Bladder cancer mortality is heightened in SCI
compared with the general population - Compared with other bladder management methods,
IDC use is associated with heightened BC
mortality
32Part 3 Risk Factors, Diagnosis, and Surveillance
33Purpose
- To evaluate factors influencing survival after
bladder cancer in individuals with SCI - To examine bladder cancer surveillance
34Hypotheses
- Bladder cancer survivors have fewer genitourinary
risk factors than those dying due to bladder
cancer - 2 Bladder cancer survivors have undergone more
intense genitourinary surveillance
35Part 3 Design Case-control
36Methods
- Design case-control
- 8 BC survivors
- 12 BC controls who died
- Outcome measures
- Demographics
- Frequency of surveillance
- Risk factors
- Analyses
- Students t test
- Fishers exact test
37Demographics
data presented as proportion
38Demographics
data presented in years
39Bladder Management Method
data presented in years
40Presentation
41Diagnosis
42Bladder Cancer Histology
43Potential Associated Risk Factors
44Risk Factors
RF IDC use, tobacco use, calculi, or
pyelonephritis
45Bladder Cancer Surveillance
46Biopsy Results
47Conclusions
- Bladder cancer survivors have fewer genitourinary
risk factors than those dying due to bladder
cancer - While IDC use is related to BC incidence,
concurrent multiple risk factor status may be
related to mortality - Bladder cancer survivors have undergone more
intense genitourinary surveillance
48Discussion of Cases