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Squamous cell metaplasia of the bladder urothelium. A retrospective study of 36 patients.

In a retrospective study of 28 women and eight men with squamous cell metaplasia in different parts of the bladder, including the trigone, no histopathological differences were observed among the regions. All the five (female) patients with parakeratosis had a concomitant invasive bladder tumour. Thirty-eight% of all the patients had a simultaneous neoplastic tumour. The metaplastic lesions were investigated for keratin in 13 patients, and all were positive. In seven out of eight patients, the urothelium adjacent to the squamous cell metaplasia was also positive for keratin, indicating a direct transformation of the urothelium to squamous cell epithelium. The metaplastic cells were investigated for oestrogen receptors in five men and five women, and all were negative, suggesting no relationship between estrogens and squamous cell metaplasia of the bladder. Squamous cell metaplasia in the bladder is not considered a premalignant condition. However, metaplasia and neoplastic tumours are often associated with chronic tissue damage, and the presence of metaplasia may give a warning of conditions that can also cause cancer.

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