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Vol. 63. Issue 5.
Pages 713-716 (October 2008)
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Vol. 63. Issue 5.
Pages 713-716 (October 2008)
Letter to the Editor
Open Access
Cystoprostatectomy with Ileal Neobladder for Treatment of Severe Cystitis Glandularis in an Aids Patient
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Rafael Ferreira CoelhoI, Giovanni Scala MarchiniII, Marcos Francisco Dall’OglioI, Mabel Tatty de MedeirosIII, Adriano João NesrallahI, Miguel SrougiI
I Department of Urology, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo – São Paulo/SP, Brazil
II Department of General Surgery, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo – São Paulo/SP, Brazil
III Department of Pathology, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo – São Paulo/SP, Brazil. Phone: 55 11 9450.2824
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INTRODUCTION

Cystitis glandularis (CG) is a proliferative and metaplastic disorder of the bladder urothelium1 that usually occurs when the bladder mucosa becomes hyperproliferative in the presence of chronic inflammation and nests of urothelium appear within the lamina propria. If inflammation persists, the urothelium may differentiate and eventually develop into cystic lesions (cystitis cystica) or glandular metaplastic lesions (cystitis glandularis).2

CG is rarely reported in children; even in adults, its incidence and clinical significance are not well known.3 It is generally a microscopic finding subsequent to cystoscopy and biopsy in a patient with irritative bladder symptoms or hematuria.4–6 Most patients do not require more aggressive surgery options, and sparse literature is available regarding the management of severe CG.6 We report here a case of an AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome) patient with cystitis glandularis refractory to standard treatment who was treated with a total cystoprostatectomy and ileal neobladder reconstruction.

CASE REPORT

A 47-year-old man presented at our institution with a 10-year history of irritative and obstructive voiding symptoms and intermittent macroscopic hematuria. He was using Lamivudine, Zidovudine, and Efavirenz for treatment of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Physical examination revealed that he had a homogeneous 20 g prostate, and laboratory testing showed normal creatinine (1.2 mg/dL) and PSA (0.8 mg/dL). Urinary culture was invariably negative.

Urinary ultrasonography revealed a thickened bladder wall and a polypoid mass in the vesical trigone and prostatic urethra. Intravenous urography showed severe bilateral hydronephrosis and delayed contrast excretion (Figure 1). Computed tomography (CT) confirmed the thickening of the bladder wall and revealed bilateral distal ureteral thickening and dilatation up to the ureterovesical junction (Figure 2). Cystoscopy revealed a polypoid mass in the vesical trigone and prostatic urethra with an inflammatory aspect. The ureteral orifices were completely obstructed and therefore impossible to identify. An incomplete transurethral resection (TURB) of the lesion was performed. Histological study revealed chronic CG with the formation of an inflammatory polyp.

Figure 1.

Intravenous urography showing bilateral ureterohydronephrosis and delayed contrast excretion. (150 minutes)

(0.04MB).
Figure 2.

Pelvic computed tomography revealing diffuse bladder wall thickening and bilateral ureteral wall thickening and dilatation

(0.03MB).

After treatment, the patient was asymptomatic for two months, after which the irritative voiding symptoms recurred. Another two TURBs were performed, with partial and temporary improvement of the symptoms. Six months after the first TURB, the patient presented anuria and azotemia secondary to bilateral ureteral obstruction. Bilateral percutaneous nephrostomy was performed, with complete recovery of renal function. After considerable counseling, the patient underwent a total cystoprostatectomy with ileal neobladder construction. Microscopic analysis confirmed chronic CG all along the bladder urothelium (Figure 3). The postoperative period was uneventful. At the 6-month follow-up, the patient was voiding well with complete continence; the serum creatinine level was 1.0 mg/dl and intravenous urography showed normal contrast excretion, with markedly reduced ureterohydronephrosis (Figure 4).

Figure 3.

Histology showing glandular structures lined with mucus-secreting cubic and columnar cells consistent with cystitis glandularis

(0.23MB).
Figure 4.

Intravenous urography, at the 6-month follow-up, showing normal contrast excretion and marked reduction of ureterohydronephrosis

(0.08MB).
DISCUSSION

CG is a benign proliferative disease of the bladder mucosa. It is accepted that the intestinal metaplasia of cystitis glandularis is a result of a chronic irritative and infectious stimulus, initially appearing as submucosal masses of epithelial cells (Brunn’s nest) followed by cavitations of such structures, central necrosis, or serosal secretion. This results in the appearance of miliary cystic structures lined with cubic or columnar epithelium and filled with serosal fluid, termed cystitis cystica. The condition is termed cystitis glandularis when there is metaplasia in a mucus-secreting epithelium.7

The exact incidence of cystitis glandularis is unknown. Patients with bladder exstrophy,8 pelvic lipomatosis9, and chronic or recurrent UTIs are considered to be at risk.7,10,11 Other causal factors, such as avitaminosis, allergy, hormone imbalance, specific carcinogens, and IgA-mediated immune mechanisms have been proposed.9,10 To our knowledge, our case is the first report of severe cystitis glandularis in a patient with AIDS. The exact correlation, if one exists, between immunodeficiency and cystitis glandularis is still unclear.

If an etiology such as chronic infection is identified, it must be appropriately treated. In the reported case, no urinary infection or other causal factors were found. An associated risk of bladder cell carcinoma10 and adenocarcinoma has been reported11–15 but is still debated.4 Although most patients with cystitis glandularis will never develop a malignant bladder lesion, it cannot be excluded that the most widely proliferative lesions may have premalignant potential.7

Lesions of cystitis glandularis are most frequent at the bladder neck or trigone,3 as in the reported case. If a mass lesion is identified, it is resected transurethrally. Generally, effective management is implemented and no further procedures are necessary to control the disease. Intravesical BCG (bacillus Calmette-Guerin) application has been described as an adjuvant therapy after TURB for the treatment of cystitis glandularis.16 Ureteral obstruction is a rare complication that results from infiltration of the periureteral submucosa.17 It may be treated with ureteral reimplantation into the dome of the bladder18 in the presence of a contractile bladder, or may require temporary percutaneous nephrostomy, as was performed in our patient. Intravesical hydrocortisone instillation19 and laser ablation20 for the management of severe CG cases have been reported as alternative treatments. Cystectomy with continent urinary diversion for cystitis glandularis has been very rarely reported.6,5 Obviously, such surgical procedures should be the last resort in these patients.6 Urinary diversion without cystectomy in such cases is considered to be ill-advised due to the possibility of persistent symptoms and the associated risk of adenocarcinoma. Our current patient had florid disease, leading to persistent irritative voiding symptoms and upper urinary tract obstruction even after multiple transurethral resections. He was successfully submitted to cystoprostatectomy with ileal neobladder reconstruction and has been asymptomatic up to the present.

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