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BJU International 2009-May

Bladder outlet obstruction accelerates bladder carcinogenesis.

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Seiji Matsumoto
Nobutaka Shimizu
Tadashi Hanai
Hirotsugu Uemura
Robert Levin

Keywords

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To examine the correlation between partial bladder outlet obstruction (PBOO) and bladder carcinogenesis.

METHODS

Female Wistar rats (6 weeks old) were divided into three groups of 10 each: group 1 was exposed to n-butyl-n-butanol nitrosamine (BBN, a carcinogen) in drinking water for 8 weeks; group 2 had PBOO induced surgically after exposure to BBN for 8 weeks; group 3 had a sham operation and the rats drank normal water (control group). After 20 weeks, all of the rats were killed humanely and their bladders analysed.

RESULTS

There were no significant differences in body weight among the groups. The bladder weight of group 2 was significantly greater than either group 1 or group 3. Histopathologically, bladder smooth muscle hypertrophy was the major cause of the increased bladder weight for group 2. In group 2 there were increases in bladder wall thickness and many nipple-shaped urothelial tumours. Basic fibroblast growth factor and hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha expression were significantly greater in group 2 than in groups 1 and 3.

CONCLUSIONS

Exposure of the bladder to carcinogens during bladder hyperplasia and hypertrophy induced by PBOO results in a greater incidence of superficial bladder carcinoma.

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