: Online published version of an accepted article before publication in the final form. Journal Name: International Journal of Case Reports and Images (IJCRI) Type of Article: Clinical Images Title: Urinary bladder cancer showing surface calcification on CT scanning Authors: Yasuyuki Taooka, Yuka Ide, Gen Takezawa doi: To be assigned Early view version published: January 11, 2017 How to cite the article: Taooka Y, Ide Y, Takezawa G. Urinary bladder cancer showing surface calcification on CT scanning. International Journal of Case Reports and Images (IJCRI). Forthcoming 2017. Disclaimer: This manuscript has been accepted for publication. This is a pdf file of the. The is an online published version of an accepted article before publication in the final form. The proof of this manuscript will be sent to the authors for corrections after which this manuscript will undergo content check, copyediting/proofreading and content formatting to conform to journal s requirements. Please note that during the above publication processes errors in content or presentation may be discovered which will be rectified during manuscript processing. These errors may affect the contents of this manuscript and final published version of this manuscript may be extensively different in content and layout than this. Page 1 of 7
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 TYPE OF ARTICLE: Clinical Images TITLE: Urinary bladder cancer showing surface calcification on CT scanning AUTHORS: Yasuyuki Taooka 1, Yuka Ide 2, Gen Takezawa 3 AFFILIATIONS: 1 MD, FACP, Department of General Medicine, Akiota Hospital, Hiroshima, Japan, taooka-alg@umin.ac.jp 2 MD, Department of General Medicine, Akiota Hospital, Hiroshima, Japan, gentaakiota@gmail.com 2 MD, Department of General Medicine, Akiota Hospital, Hiroshima, Japan, yukaideakiota@gmail.com CORRESPONDING AUTHOR Yasuyuki Taooka, MD, FACP, Department of General Medicine, Akiota Hospital, Shimodomo-Gohchi 236, Akiota-Cho, Yamagata-Gun, Hiroshima, 731-3622, Japan Email: taooka-alg@umin.ac.jp; Short Running Title: NOT GIVEN Guarantor of Submission: The corresponding author is the guarantor of submission. 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Page 2 of 7
34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 TITLE: Urinary bladder cancer showing surface calcification on CT scanning CASE REPORT 84-year-old man who was ex-smoker consulted out-patient clinic complained of sudden-on-set of right hemiplegia. Cerebral MRI showed early stage of lacunar infarction of left cerebral basal ganglia, and administration of anti-platelet agent was started. 2 days after admission, patient noticed dark color change of urine. There were no other symptoms. Urinalysis revealed moderate occult blood, mild proteinuria, ph 8.5, but urine culture was sterile. Plain abdominal CT (Figure 1 and Figure 2) demonstrated flatter- and round-shaped, tumorous lesion on the right lateral part of urinary bladder lumen. The surface of tumorous lesion was irregular, and spotted calcification was recognized. Blood laboratory examination showed as following; C-reactive protein 0.4 mg/dl, white blood cell count 5,300/ ml, hemoglobin 15.0 g/dl, thrombocyte count 193,000/ ml, CEA 3.0 ng/ml, SCC 1.3 ng/ml, PSA 0.8 ng/ml, albumin 4.2 g/dl, Ca 10.3 mg/dl, P 2.6 mg/dl, intact PTH 48 pg/ml (normal range: 10-65), and PTH related peptide was 1.3 pmol/l (normal range: less than 1.1). Although hypercalcemia was complicated, other symptoms consistent with paraneoplastic syndrome were not recognized. During the treatment of cerebral infarction, urine cytological examination was repeated and showed class V (transitional cell carcinoma mixed with squamous cell carcinoma). There were no metastatic other organs, and endoscopic tumor resection (transurethral resection of bladder) was performed. The size of cancer was 20 mm, and final pathological report was transitional cell carcinoma mixed with squamous cell carcinoma partially invaded into muscle layer of bladder wall (pt2, pl1, pv0). Grade of severity was G3. Since the patients was rather older and possible risk of cerebral infarction recurrence after surgery was high, surgical removal of whole urinary bladder did not selected as the therapeutic option. Then, additional radiation therapy against urinary bladder was performed. After that, serum calcium concentration recovered into normal ranged. At the point of 5 years past, no recurrence was confirmed, and patient was alive. 63 64 65 Page 3 of 7
66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 DISCUSSION The incidence of urinary bladder cancer is still remained high, and smoking is known as risk factor [1]. But calcification with urinary bladder cancer like this case is rare. According to previous report, incidence of calcification with urinary bladder cancer was less than 1.0% [2, 3]. The characteristic finding of this case was as following, cell type was relative rare, transitional cell carcinoma combined with squamous cell carcinoma, and laboratory data showed hypercalcemia. As the cause of calcification in the present case, the involvement of hypercalcemia was speculated. Hyercalcemia-related paraneoplastic syndrome is known as one of complications of urinary bladder cancer [4]. Fortunately, this case did show complaints related hypercalcemia, and serum calcium concentration recovered into normal ranged after all the treatment of cancer. On the other hand, Moon WK et al [5] reported about calcification appearance in blabber cancer and pathological findings. They reported that surface nodular or plaque-like calcification was seen in transitional carcinoma, and multiple fine punctate calcifications were seen in mucinous adenocarcinoma. As the other reasons of tumor calcification, repeated urinary-tract infection and parasite infection induced bladder cancer were also reported [2, 3, 5-7], but in this case did not consisted with them. CONCLUSION A rare case of urinary bladder cancer was reported. When recognizing tumor with calcification in urinary bladder, possibility of complication with hypercalcemia should be considered. Keywords: urinary bladder cancer, hypercalcemia, calcification CONFLICT OF INTEREST The authors declare that we have no competing interests AUTHOR S CONTRIBUTIONS YT and YI helped to obtain the clinical data, and contributed in critiquing the manuscript. All authors have read and approved the final manuscript. Page 4 of 7
98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 REFFERENCES 1. Zhang Y, Zhu C, Curado MP, Zheng T, Boyle P. Changing patterns of bladder cancer in the USA: evidence of heterogeneous disease. BJU Int 2012; 109(1): 52. 2. Fujioka T, Ishii N, Chiba R. Pathological changes associated with topical chemotherapy of adriamycin for bladder cancer. Hinyokika Kiyo. 1983; 29(8): 869. 3. Miller SW. Pfister RC. Calcification in uroepithelial tumors of the bladder. Report of 5 cases and survey of the literature. Am J Roenigenol Radium Ther Nucl Med. 1974; 121(4) : 827. 4. Yoshida T, Suzumiya J, Katakami H, Kimura N, Hisano S, Kikuchi M, Okumura M. Hypercalcemia caused by PTH-rP associated with lung metastasis from urinary bladder carcinoma: an autopsied case. Int Med 1994: 33(11): 673. 5. Moon WK, Kim SH, Cho JM, Han MC. Calcified bladder tumors. CT features. Acta Radiol. 1992; 33(5): 440. 6. Pollack HM, Banner MP. Martine LO. Hodson CJ. Diagnostic considerations in urinary bladder wall calcification. Am J Roentgen 1981; 136(4): 791. 7. Honeycutt J, Hannan O, Fu CL, Hsieh MH. Controversies and challenges in research on urogenital schistosomiasis-associated bladder cancer. Trends Parasitol. 2014; 30(7):324. FIGURES LEGENDS Figure 1: Plain pelvic CT. Arrow head shows surface calcification of urinary bladder cancer. Figure 2: Coronal section of plain abdominal CT. Arrow head shows urinary bladder cancer with spotted calcification. 127 128 129 Page 5 of 7
130 FIGURES 131 132 133 134 135 Figure 1: Plain pelvic CT. Arrow head shows surface calcification of urinary bladder cancer. 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 Page 6 of 7
153 154 155 156 Figure 2: Coronal section of plain abdominal CT. Arrow head shows urinary bladder cancer with spotted calcification. Page 7 of 7