The American College of Physicians has issued new recommendations for evaluating hematuria as a marker for occult urinary cancer.

The American College of Physicians has issued new recommendations for evaluating hematuria as a marker for occult urinary cancer.

The clinical guideline, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, recommends the following:

  • Gross hematuria should be included in clinicians’ routine review of systems. In particular, all patients with microscopic hematuria should be asked about their history of visible hematuria.
  • In asymptomatic adults, screening urinalysis shouldn’t be used to detect cancer.
  • In asymptomatic patients, heme-positive results from dipstick tests should be confirmed with microscopic urinalysis demonstrating three or more erythrocytes per high-powered field.
  • All adults with visible hematuria, even if self-limited, should be referred for further urologic workup.
  • For adults with microscopically confirmed hematuria but no demonstrable benign cause, clinicians should consider a urology referral for cystoscopy and imaging.
  • Hematuria should be evaluated even if patients are taking antiplatelets or anticoagulants.
  • Urinary cytology or other urine-based molecular markers for detecting bladder cancer shouldn’t be ordered in patients’ initial evaluation for hematuria.

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