This prospective multicenter observational study evaluates whether women ≥50 years with isolated acute hemorrhagic cystitis (AHC) and macroscopic hematuria require full malignancy workup. All participants undergo standard diagnostics (cystoscopy, CT urography, cytology), with 12-month follow-up for cancer detection. The aim is to identify low-risk patients where invasive investigations may be safely avoided.
The BLUSH trial is a prospective, multicenter, observational study investigating whether full malignancy workup is necessary in women ≥50 years presenting with isolated acute hemorrhagic cystitis (AHC) and macroscopic hematuria. AHC is defined as macroscopic hematuria accompanied by acute lower urinary tract symptoms (dysuria, frequency, urgency) of less than one week's duration. Women with prior urological malignancies, significant comorbidities, or impaired consent capacity are excluded. All enrolled patients undergo standardized initial assessment including full clinical history (smoking, family history, comorbidities), physical examination, urinalysis, urine culture, cystoscopy, CT urography, and cytology when indicated. Participants are stratified into AHC and non-AHC groups based on symptomatology and laboratory findings. Data collection includes demographics, symptom duration, urine findings, cancer diagnoses (type, stage, grade), treatment details, and clinical outcomes. Patients are followed for a minimum of 12 months via medical record review to capture delayed cancer diagnoses. Data are pseudonymized and stored securely under GDPR regulations. The primary outcome is the incidence of urological malignancy within one year. Secondary outcomes include time to diagnosis, proportion of avoidable invasive procedures, and accuracy of the AHC classification in predicting cancer risk. The study aims to support individualized risk-based management in women with hematuria.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
300
Observational study. All patients in this group undergo standard diagnostic evaluation including cystoscopy, CT urography, and urine cytology (if clinically indicated), performed during initial assessment for acute macroscopic hematuria.
All patients in this group undergo standard diagnostic evaluation including cystoscopy, CT urography, and urine cytology (if clinically indicated), performed during initial assessment for atypical or chronic presentations of macroscopic hematuria.
Uddevalla Hospital
Uddevalla, Sweden
RECRUITINGIncidence of urological malignancy
The proportion of women diagnosed with urological cancer (bladder, upper urinary tract, or kidney cancer) within 12 months after initial presentation of macroscopic hematuria.
Time frame: At least 12 months from study inclusion.
Time to cancer diagnosis
Duration from initial presentation to confirmed diagnosis of urological malignancy.
Time frame: At least 12 months from study inclusion.
Proportion of potentially avoidable invasive procedures in AHG
Percentage of invasive diagnostic procedures (e.g., cystoscopy, CT-urography) in the Acute Hemorrhagic Cystitis Group (AHG) that could have been avoided based on study findings.
Time frame: At least 12 months from study inclusion.
Sensitivity and specificity of AHC classification
Accuracy of the acute hemorrhagic cystitis (AHC) clinical classification in predicting urological malignancy, measured by sensitivity and specificity.
Time frame: At least 12 months from study inclusion.
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