The sex gap in bladder cancer survival - a missing link in bladder cancer care?
Authors
Toren, P.Wilkins, A.
Patel, K.
Burley, A.
Gris, T.
Kockelbergh, R.
Lodhi, Taha
Choudhury, Ananya
Bryan, R. T.
Affiliation
CHU de Québec-Université Laval, Quebec City, Quebec, CanadaIssue Date
2023
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Show full item recordAbstract
The differences in bladder cancer outcomes between the sexes has again been highlighted. Uncommon among cancers, bladder cancer outcomes are notably worse for women than for men. Furthermore, bladder cancer is three to four times more common among men than among women. Factors that might explain these sex differences include understanding the importance of haematuria as a symptom of bladder cancer by both clinicians and patients, the resultant delays in diagnosis and referral of women with haematuria, and health-care access. Notably, these factors seem to have geographical variation and are not consistent across all health-care systems. Likewise, data relating to sex-specific treatment responses for patients with non-muscle-invasive or muscle-invasive bladder cancer are inconsistent. The influence of differences in the microbiome, bladder wall thickness and urine dwell times remain to be elucidated. The interplay of hormone signalling, gene expression, immunology and the tumour microenvironment remains complex but probably underpins the sexual dimorphism in disease incidence and stage and histology at presentation. The contribution of these biological phenomena to sex-specific outcome differences is probable, albeit potentially treatment-specific, and further understanding is required. Notwithstanding these aspects, we identify opportunities to harness biological differences to improve treatment outcomes, as well as areas of fundamental and translational research to pursue. At the level of policy and health-care delivery, improvements can be made across the domains of patient awareness, clinician education, referral pathways and guideline-based care. Together, we aim to highlight opportunities to close the sex gap in bladder cancer outcomes.Citation
Toren P, Wilkins A, Patel K, Burley A, Gris T, Kockelbergh R, et al. The sex gap in bladder cancer survival - a missing link in bladder cancer care? Nat Rev Urol. 2023 Aug 21. PubMed PMID: 37604983. Epub 2023/08/22. eng.Journal
Nature Reviews UrologyDOI
10.1038/s41585-023-00806-2PubMed ID
37604983Additional Links
https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41585-023-00806-2Type
ArticleLanguage
enae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1038/s41585-023-00806-2
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