Doctors share bladder cancer warning signs after Deion Sanders reveals diagnosis and recovery

Doctors share bladder cancer warning signs after Deion Sanders reveals diagnosis and recovery

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After the announcement of the athlete of the Hall of Fame Deion Sanders that he fought against bladder cancer, doctors share warning signals to monitor.

Sanders, who is currently a soccer coach at the University of Colorado Boulder, talked about his medical struggles during a Monday press conference held at Folsom Field in Boulder.

The former NFL and MLB star, 57, appeared along with her care team and representatives of the University of Colorado Health (UC Health) and the Anschutz medical campus of the University of Colorado (Cu Asechutz).

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Sanders was diagnosed with “very high and high -risk non -muscular invasive bladder cancer,” but now he is free of cancer, according to a statement from his oncologist.

“We removed the tumor. It was very tall and invading through the bladder wall,” said Dr. Janet Kukreja, director of Urological Oncology at An Anshutz. “I am pleased to inform that the results of surgery are that it is cured of cancer.”

Deion Sanders at the press conference

The chief coach Deion Sanders, from the University of Colorado, talks about his trip that hits bladder cancer during a press conference at the TouchDown club in Folsom Field in Boulder, Colorado, on July 28, 2025. (Getty images)

The oncologist said that the type of Sanders cancer has a very high rate of recurrence and progression.

Treating the disease inside the bladder would require a long series of treatments for a period of three years, and there would still be a 50% chance that cancer returns.

Cancer could also have spread to the muscle, said the doctor, which occurs in approximately half of the cases.

Cancer could be detected three years before diagnosis with experimental blood analysis.

“Only about 10% of people live five years, even with our current medical treatment, if metastasis,” he said.

Together with his attention team, Sanders made the decision to have an bladder elimination, in which surgeons made a “laparoscopic bladder extraction assisted by complete robot” and created a new bladder.

“It is a new way of life. And it is a safe learning curve.”

“It is a laparoscopic surgery where we unite a robot to the patient, and then we do all the robot maneuvers,” Kukreja said. “And then, once the bladder comes out, we also take some lymph nodes to make sure it has not spread, and then we do a new bladder using [the patient’s] own intestines. “

“It is a new way of life. And it is a safe learning curve.”

Deion Sanders with doctors

The former NFL and MLB star, 57, appeared along with her care team and representatives of the University of Colorado Health (UC Health) and the Anschutz medical campus of the University of Colorado (Cu Asechutz). (Getty images)

Lauren Askevold, an athletic coach from Colorado University, shared that the Sanders bladder tumor was inadvertently discovered during a computed tomography to monitor the health of her heart.

Sanders, who lost 25 pounds during the course of his cancer trip, said he is grateful and urged others to be aware of the warning signs and seek medical attention.

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“It has been a tremendous trip. It has been difficult,” he said at the press conference. “Everyone reviews, because if it weren’t for me to take the proof of something else, they would not have encountered this.”

“And be sure to get the right care. Because without wonderful people like this, I would probably not be sitting here today, because it grew very expected.”

Sanders also talked about his struggles with the use of a catheter and no longer had control of his bladder, pointing out that “it is a change of life.”

“Blood in urine in the absence of infection is never normal and should always be verified.”

“I know that many people are going through what I am happening and dealing with what I am trying, and let’s stop shame of it, let’s deal with that straight ahead,” he said.

Sanders said he feels strong and ready to train again. “It was never in my spirit, in my heart, that God did not allow me to train again.”

Deion Sanders press conference

“It has been a tremendous trip. It has been difficult,” Sanders said at the press conference. (Getty images)

Kukreja said Sanders’ perspective is “very good.”

“We will simply keep it in routine surveillance scans. Apart from that, nothing more.”

Bladder cancer warning signals

Although Sanders said that “he had no signs at all,” Kukreja emphasized the importance of people being aware of red flags for bladder cancer, which is the fourth most common cancer in men.

“The first signs are usually blood in the urine,” he said during the press conference. “Blood in urine in the absence of infection is never normal and should always be verified.”

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Even in the absence of symptoms, Kukreja recommends seeing a primary care doctor regularly, eating well and refraining.

“The coach was never a smoker, and one of the people who unfortunately received bladder cancer,” he said. “But that is also something that is closely associated with bladder cancer.”

Bladder cancer concept

The first signs of bladder cancer generally include blood in the urine. The less common signs include strong impulses to urinate and urinate frequently with mild discomfort that does not decrease with common treatments.

Dr. Chad Ryan Ritch, MD, urological oncologist at the Integral Cancer Center in Sylvester, part of the University of Miami health system, did not treat Sanders, but shared contributions on the warning of bladder cancer warning.

“The main sign is the presence of visible (or microscopic) blood in the urine, without pain and in the absence of infection or trauma,” said News Digital.

The less common signs, according to the doctor, include strong impulses to urinate and urinate frequently with mild discomfort that does not decrease with common treatments.

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“These are known as irritating irritating symptoms,” said Ritch, who is also an associate professor of urological oncology at the Uhealth Desii Sethi Institute.

In advanced cases, some patients may experience urinary obstruction with the lock of the ureter, which connects the kidney with the bladder.

Diagnosis of man

The Sanders doctor emphasized the importance of people being aware of any red flag for bladder cancer, which is the most common fourth cancer in men. (Istock)

“This can occur as pain in the flank and should not be ignored, especially if it occurs with blood in the urine and without other identifiable causes, such as infection or trauma,” Ritch said.

The doctor reiterated that the most common cause of urootelial bladder cancer in the US.

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“Chronic infections of the urinary tract and the decades of inflammation of the bladder of instrumentation, such as catheters, can also cause bladder cancer of squamous cell bladder,” Ritch added.

“The message to take home is that if you have these risk factors and have visible or microscopic blood in the urine, then it is important to see a doctor.”

Melissa Rudy is a senior health editor and a member of the lifestyle in News Digital. The advice of history can be sent to melissa.rudy@News.com.

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