Messing E M, Young T B, Hunt V B, Newton M A, Bram L L, Vaillancourt A, Hisgen W J, Greenberg E B, Kuglitsch M E, Wegenke J D
Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA.
J Urol. 1995 Jul;154(1):57-61. doi: 10.1016/s0022-5347(01)67224-0.
To determine at what interval screening should be repeated to detect bladder cancer before it becomes muscle invasive 856 men who had 14 negative daily home tests for hematuria with a chemical reagent strip 9 months previously performed repeat tests. Of these men 50 (5.8%) had at least 1 positive test during the second 14-day screening period and 38 were evaluated, 15 of whom (39.5%) had significant urological pathological conditions, including 8 with malignancies. Bladder cancer was noted in 7 men, with no tumor invading the muscularis propria. The finding of 7 bladder cancers in 856 men (0.82%) who had a negative test 9 months previously indicates that bladder cancer has a brief preclinical duration and that testing must be repeated at least annually for screening to detect bladder cancer consistently before invasion occurs.