investigations
Last reviewed 01/2018
The investigations of choice in any patient with haematuria are:
- urinalysis - culture for bacteria, microscopy to confirm presence of red blood cells, and cytology for malignant cells. Urine cytology enables diagnosis and grading of the tumour in 60% of cases.
- intravenous urography - now rarely used
- upper urinary tract tumours usually appear as filling defects in the renal pelvis or ureters. Rarely, the renal outline may be distorted. A bladder tumour may cause ureteric obstruction. An IVU will usually demonstrate a renal adenocarcinoma causing haematuria.
- ultrasound
- cystoscopy
- other useful investigations
- full blood count, urea and electrolytes, creatinine
- chest x-ray
Suggested investagtions if diagnosis of bladder cancer (1)
- consider CT or MRI staging before transurethral resection of bladder tumour
(TURBT) if muscle-invasive bladder cancer is suspected at cystoscopy
- offer white-light-guided TURBT with one of photodynamic diagnosis, narrow-band
imaging, cytology or a urinary biomarker test (such as UroVysion using fluorescence
in-situ hybridization [FISH], ImmunoCyt or a nuclear matrix protein 22 [NMP22]
test) to people with suspected bladder cancer. This should be carried out
or supervised by a urologist experienced in TURBT
- obtain detrusor muscle during TURBT
- offer people with suspected bladder cancer a single dose of intravesical mitomycin C given at the same time as the first TURBT
- obtain detrusor muscle during TURBT
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