#PAGE_PARAMS# #ADS_HEAD_SCRIPTS# #MICRODATA#

Synchronic triplicity of urological malignancies


Authors: Monika Žižlavská;  Martin Drábek;  Zdeněk Lavička
Authors‘ workplace: Urologické oddělení, Nemocnice Jihlava
Published in: Ces Urol 2014; 18(1): 44-48
Category: Case report

Overview

Multiple tumors, as defined by the criteria of the IARC (International Agency of Research on Cancer), must have an origin in different organs, must have a different histological structure, and must not be a metastasis from another primary tumour. According to the time of development, multiple tumors are divided into synchroneous or asynchronous. The most frequent multiple tumors are duplicate, triplicity is rare, and development of more then three tumors in a single patient is very rare. We present a case report of a patient with three synchronous urological malignancies, prostate adenocarcinoma, renal cell carcinoma of the right kidney and urothelial bladder carcinoma.

Key words:
triplicity, synchronic, renal carcinoma, urothelial carcinoma, prostate adenocarcinoma.


Sources

1. Dvořáček J, et al. Urologie praktického lékaře. Praha: ISV 2000; 127–173.

2. Prošvic P, Odrážka K, Morávek P, et al. Vícečetné malignity v urologii – kazuistiky. Praha: ČOS ČLS JEP 2004.

3. Dušek L, et al. Epidemiologie zhoubných nádorů v České republice na: www.svod.cz

4. Morikawa, Y, Shiomi, K, Isihara, Y, et al. Triple primary cancers involving kidney, urinary bladder, and liver in a dye worker. Am J Ind Med 1997; 31: 44–49.

4. Vybrané otázky onkologie VIII. Praha: Galén 2004: 112–116

5. www.czechurol.cz

6. www.linkos.cz

Labels
Paediatric urologist Nephrology Urology
Topics Journals
Login
Forgotten password

Enter the email address that you registered with. We will send you instructions on how to set a new password.

Login

Don‘t have an account?  Create new account

#ADS_BOTTOM_SCRIPTS#