1. Late bacille Calmette-Guérin infection with a large focal urinary bladder ulceration as a complication of bladder cancer treatment.
- Author
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Ströck V, Dotevall L, Sandberg T, Gustafsson CK, and Holmäng S
- Subjects
- Administration, Intravesical, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cystectomy, Epidemiologic Methods, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mycobacterium bovis isolation & purification, Tuberculosis, Urogenital drug therapy, Tuberculosis, Urogenital urine, Urinary Bladder microbiology, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms surgery, Antibiotics, Antitubercular therapeutic use, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, BCG Vaccine adverse effects, Tuberculosis, Urogenital etiology, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
Objective: • To report a late bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) complication previously not described in the literature., Patients and Methods: • We reviewed our database with 858 patients treated with BCG from 1986 to 2008 and identified 13 male patients (1.8% of all male patients) who had a large tuberculous-like bladder ulcer., Results: • All patients had high-grade tumours and seven had tumours invading lamina propria before BCG treatment. A solitary ulceration or inflammatory lesion, 10-50 mm in diameter, was seen at routine follow-up cystoscopy 2-34 months (median 8 months) after the first instillation. Significantly more patients had been treated with BCG-RIVM than with BCG-Tice (10/320 vs. three of 454, P < 0.01). BCG was cultured from urine 3-34 months (median 14 months) after the last instillation. • So far, eight patients have been successfully treated with rifampicin and isoniazid. Nine patients are still tumour-free 15-66 months (median 44 months) after the last transurethral resection before BCG treatment. • Another three patients had one to two non-invasive recurrences. One patient had an invasive recurrence and underwent cystectomy. The present study is limited by biases associated with its retrospective design., Conclusions: • This is the first report on persisting BCG infections with large inflammatory lesions in the bladder. Treatment is effective and the oncological outcome is good. • Mycobacterial cultures of the urine should be performed in BCG-patients with unclear inflammatory lesions in the bladder since a delayed diagnosis of a persistent BCG infection could result in a permanently reduced bladder capacity. • Large studies are warranted to study differences in efficacy and side-effects between different BCG strains., (© 2010 THE AUTHORS; BJU INTERNATIONAL © 2010 BJU INTERNATIONAL.)
- Published
- 2011
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