Bladder CancerWhat Increases Your RiskThe major risk factors for
bladder cancer include: - Smoking.
- Cigarette smokers are twice as likely to
develop bladder cancer as nonsmokers.1
- Pipe and cigar smokers have a slightly increased
risk compared to nonsmokers, but the risk is significantly less than it is for
cigarette smokers.4
- Being older than 40. Your risk goes up as you get
older, and most people who get bladder cancer are in their 60s.1
- Being male. Men are 4 times more likely than
women to develop bladder cancer.1
- Race. In the U.S., white people (Caucasians)
develop bladder cancer twice as often as African-Americans or Hispanics.
Asians, Native Americans, and Alaska Natives have the lowest rates of bladder
cancer.5
- Exposure to cancer-causing
materials (carcinogens) may cause up to 20% of bladder cancer cases in the
United States. It may take years (as many as 30 to 50) for cancer to appear.
This risk may also depend on how much of the material a person is repeatedly
exposed to over time.6 Chemical exposure can be a risk
for many types of workers from truck drivers to textile workers to
hair-stylists. It has been linked to chemicals called aromatic amines that are
found in many products, including dyes, paints, solvents, inks, and the dust
from leather.7
- A history of treatment with
cyclophosphamide or arsenic.
- A diet that is high in nitrates or
rich in meat and fatty foods.
- Chronic bladder infections (cystitis), especially in people who have
catheters in place all the time.
- A history of bladder cancer or a kidney transplant.
- A
family history of bladder cancer.
- A history of radiation therapy or
chemotherapy for treatment of
endometrial or
ovarian cancer.
- Schistosomiasis, which is an infection with the parasite
Schistosoma haematobium. This condition is sometimes
found in developing countries and rarely occurs in North America.
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