Document detail
ID

oai:www.zora.uzh.ch:235085

Topic
Institute of Pathology and Molecul... 610 Medicine & health
Author
Jubber, Ibrahim Ong, Sean Bukavina, Laura Black, Peter C Compérat, Eva https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8488-543X Kamat, Ashish M Kiemeney, Lambertus Lawrentschuk, Nathan Lerner, Seth P Meeks, Joshua J Moch, Holger https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7986-2839 Necchi, Andrea https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3007-2756 Panebianco, Valeria Sridhar, Srikala S Znaor, Ariana Catto, James W F Cumberbatch, Marcus G
Langue
eng
Editor

Elsevier

Category

Subjects = 04 Faculty of Medicine

Year

2023

listing date

10/12/2023

Keywords
smoking systematic external 2020 specific factors risk cancer bladder review exposure evidence
Metrics

Abstract

CONTEXT Bladder cancer (BC) is common worldwide and poses a significant public health challenge.

External risk factors and the wider exposome (totality of exposure from external and internal factors) contribute significantly to the development of BC.

Therefore, establishing a clear understanding of these risk factors is the key to prevention.

OBJECTIVE To perform an up-to-date systematic review of BC's epidemiology and external risk factors.

EVIDENCE ACQUISITION Two reviewers (I.J. and S.O.) performed a systematic review using PubMed and Embase in January 2022 and updated it in September 2022.

The search was restricted to 4 yr since our previous review in 2018.

EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS Our search identified 5177 articles and a total of 349 full-text manuscripts.

GLOBOCAN data from 2020 revealed an incidence of 573 000 new BC cases and 213 000 deaths worldwide in 2020.

The 5-yr prevalence worldwide in 2020 was 1 721 000.

Tobacco smoking and occupational exposures (aromatic amines and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) are the most substantial risk factors.

In addition, correlative evidence exists for several risk factors, including specific dietary factors, imbalanced microbiome, gene-environment risk factor interactions, diesel exhaust emission exposure, and pelvic radiotherapy.

CONCLUSIONS We present a contemporary overview of the epidemiology of BC and the current evidence for BC risk factors.

Smoking and specific occupational exposures are the most established risk factors.

There is emerging evidence for specific dietary factors, imbalanced microbiome, gene-external risk factor interactions, diesel exhaust emission exposure, and pelvic radiotherapy.

Further high-quality evidence is required to confirm initial findings and further understand cancer prevention.

PATIENT SUMMARY Bladder cancer is common, and the most substantial risk factors are smoking and workplace exposure to suspected carcinogens.

On-going research to identify avoidable risk factors could reduce the number of people who get bladder cancer.

Jubber, Ibrahim,Ong, Sean,Bukavina, Laura,Black, Peter C,Compérat, Eva, https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8488-543X,Kamat, Ashish M,Kiemeney, Lambertus,Lawrentschuk, Nathan,Lerner, Seth P,Meeks, Joshua J,Moch, Holger, https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7986-2839,Necchi, Andrea, https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3007-2756,Panebianco, Valeria,Sridhar, Srikala S,Znaor, Ariana,Catto, James W F,Cumberbatch, Marcus G, 2023, Epidemiology of Bladder Cancer in 2023: A Systematic Review of Risk Factors, Elsevier

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