Genes involved in the pathogenesis of bladder cancer include HRAS, Rb1, PTEN/MMAC1, NAT2, and GSTM1. On gross pathology, flat lesions or papillary lesions are characteristic findings of non-invasive transitional cell carcinomas; a large infiltrative mass or a multifocal, flat to papillary lesion with delicate fronds are characteristic findings of invasive transitional cell carcinomas. On microscopic histopathological analysis, loss of cell polarity, nuclear crowding, and cytologic atypia are characteristic findings of flat lesion; fibrovascular stalks, umbrella cells, and eosinophiliccytoplasm are characteristic findings of papillary lesion; invasion beyond the basement membrane is the characteristic finding of invasive transitional cell carcinomas.
Most cancers that form in the bladder, the lower part of the kidneys, the ureters, and the proximal urethra are transitional cell carcinomas (also called urothelial carcinomas) that derive from transitional epithelium.
Urothelial carcinomas may be non-invasive or invasive.
Urothelial carcinomas with mixed epithelial features are invasive tumors that have different types of cells mixed with the cancer cells.
On gross pathology, a large infiltrative mass or a multifocal, flat to papillary lesion with delicate fronds are characteristic findings of invasive urothelial carcinoma.