Resumen:
A broad spectrum of lesions, including hyperplastic, metaplastic, inflammatory, infectious,
and reactive, may mimic cancer all along the urinary tract. This narrative collects most of
them from a clinical and pathologic perspective, offering urologists and general pathologists
their most salient definitory features. Together with classical, well-known, entities such as
urothelial papillomas (conventional (UP) and inverted (IUP)), nephrogenic adenoma (NA), polypoid
cystitis (PC), fibroepithelial polyp (FP), prostatic-type polyp (PP), verumontanum cyst (VC),
xanthogranulomatous inflammation (XI), reactive changes secondary to BCG instillations (BCGitis),
schistosomiasis (SC), keratinizing desquamative squamous metaplasia (KSM), post-radiation changes
(PRC), vaginal-type metaplasia (VM), endocervicosis (EC)/endometriosis (EM) (müllerianosis),
malakoplakia (MK), florid von Brunn nest proliferation (VB), cystitis/ureteritis cystica (CC),
and glandularis (CG), among others, still other cellular proliferations with concerning histological
features and poorly understood etiopathogenesis like IgG4-related disease (IGG4), PEComa (PEC),
and pseudosarcomatous myofibroblastic proliferations (post-...