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The urinary symptoms most people ignore until it’s too late, doctor explains the hidden cancer risk

Aadya Jha
| TIMESOFINDIA.COM | Last updated on - May 15, 2026, 11:00 IST
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1/6

Urinary signs you shouldn’t ignore


Most people do not rush to a doctor for urinary discomfort. A little burning sensation, frequent bathroom visits at night, or mild lower back pain often gets blamed on dehydration, stress, ageing, or infection. The problem is that the body sometimes sends early warnings in very ordinary ways.

Urinary tract cancers, including bladder, kidney, prostate, and ureter cancers, can begin quietly. In many cases, the symptoms appear subtle before becoming severe. Ignoring them for months may allow the disease to spread, making treatment more demanding physically, emotionally, and financially.

According to the National Cancer Institute, bladder and kidney cancers are more treatable when found early, before they spread beyond the urinary system.

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The symptoms many people ignore

One of the most alarming signs is blood in the urine, even if it appears only once and without pain. Doctors say this symptom should never be dismissed casually.

Other symptoms that may need medical evaluation include:

Frequent urination
Burning sensation during urination
Difficulty controlling urine
Weak urine flow
Constant urge to urinate, especially at night
Persistent lower abdominal or back pain
​

Dr Anil Thakwani says, “Often people do not pay attention to urinary issues, thinking that it's due to aging or infection, or it is temporary. Persistent urinary symptoms, however, may sometimes indicate an early development of urinary tract cancers such as bladder, kidney, prostate or ureter cancer. When a diagnosis is delayed, treatment options might be more difficult and there may be a lower likelihood of improved recovery.”

What makes these symptoms confusing is that they can also resemble urinary infections or prostate enlargement. That overlap is exactly why timely medical evaluation matters. A urine test, imaging scan, or cystoscopy can help doctors understand the real cause.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) cancer screening resources also stress the importance of paying attention to unusual body changes and seeking medical guidance early.

3/6

Why delayed diagnosis changes everything

Cancer treatment today is far more advanced than it was even a decade ago. But timing still shapes outcomes.

If urinary cancers are diagnosed early, doctors may manage them through surgery, focused radiation therapy, or targeted treatments with better success rates. Once cancer spreads to nearby tissues, lymph nodes, or distant organs, treatment often becomes more aggressive and prolonged.

Dr Thakwani explains, “The key to successful cancer treatment is early detection. If diagnosed early, many urinary tract cancers can be treated more effectively using surgery, radiation therapy or other advanced treatments.”

Modern radiation techniques now allow doctors to target tumours more precisely while reducing damage to surrounding healthy tissue. Yet even the best technology works better when cancer is caught in its earlier stages.

A government-backed review published by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) highlights that delayed cancer diagnosis is consistently linked with poorer treatment outcomes and increased disease burden.

4/6

Who faces higher risk?

Not every urinary symptom means cancer. Still, certain groups should stay especially alert.

People above 50, smokers, workers exposed to industrial chemicals, and those with a family history of urinary cancers carry higher risk. Long-term tobacco use remains one of the strongest known risk factors for bladder cancer.

There is also a cultural problem attached to urinary health. Many people feel embarrassed discussing these issues openly. Some quietly tolerate symptoms for months, hoping they disappear on their own.

That silence can be dangerous.

In India, where routine preventive screening is still not common in many households, symptoms are often noticed only after they begin affecting daily life. By then, diagnosis may already be delayed.

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Listening to the body can save lives

The human body rarely changes without reason. A repeated symptom is often its way of demanding attention.

Doctors recommend seeking medical advice if unusual urinary symptoms continue for several days or keep returning. Routine health check-ups after the age of 40 or 50 can also help detect hidden problems before they become severe.

Dr Thakwani adds, “While great strides have been made in cancer treatment over the years, one of the most powerful weapons in the fight against cancer remains early detection. Recognising signs early and seeking medical advice can save lives.”

The message is simple but important: embarrassment should never become a barrier to diagnosis. A short medical consultation today may prevent a far more difficult battle tomorrow.

6/6

Medical experts consulted


This article includes expert inputs shared with TOI Health by:

Dr Anil Thakwani, Senior Consultant and HOD, Radiation Oncology, ShardaCare-Healthcity.

Inputs were used to explain how persistent urinary symptoms can sometimes signal serious underlying cancers, why delaying diagnosis may make treatment more difficult, and why timely medical consultation and early detection are crucial for better recovery outcomes.



Top Comment
K
Kundan
10 days ago
Such articles really scare me and I dont understand they even write it. There could several symptons and several reasons for different diseases and diagnosis. Instead of writing articles on what causes it they prefer on writing stuff that will build fear and get more money to doctors then they already spending. Why dont you spend time on writing whether indians are getting food or checmial and adulterated foods, how the corrupt thekedars, farmers using deadly pesticides that are causing such diseases and how is the government even allowing these? write article on such bold topics rather than such useless assumed symptoms!!!
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Copyright © May 26, 2026, 07.14AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service