Blood in Urine Led to Bladder Cancer Diagnosis for 39-Year-Old Man; New Treatment INLEXZO Helped Him Become Cancer-Free
By
Toria Sheffield
If you only eat one bagel today, this is the bagel.
Summary
A 39-year-old man, James 'Jimi' Stewart, noticed blood in his urine and was diagnosed with bladder cancer decades earlier than typical onset. After receiving a new treatment called INLEXZO, he is now cancer-free. The article highlights the key warning sign of blood in urine, the importance of paying attention to unusual symptoms even in young, active individuals, and Stewart's journey from diagnosis to recovery.
Key quotes
· 3 pulledYou'd find me out rollerblading with friends, paddleboarding, tubing and really soaking up everything the outdoors has to offer.
My health really wasn't on my radar, though. I had been a smoker, but honestly, health concerns were not top of mind for me.
I was 39, active and enjoying my life.
You might also wanna read

WHO chief urges community cooperation to contain Ebola outbreak in eastern DRC
The World Health Organization's director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, appealed for community cooperation in containing the Ebola out
Cambridge hospital meets NHS waiting list target ahead of 2026 deadline
New NHS data shows waiting lists at Cambridge hospital are improving, with the national target of having at least 65% of patients waiting no
Brazil monitors two patients for possible Ebola as DR Congo outbreak surpasses 1,000 cases
Brazil is monitoring two patients for possible Ebola infection amid the ongoing outbreak in DR Congo, which has over 1,000 suspected cases a
Duke Health settles $3.7M class-action lawsuit over patient data shared with Meta
Duke University Health System has reached a $3.7 million class-action settlement after patients alleged their personal data was shared with
SCP study: 5.5 million Dutch provide informal care, with growing burden on men and over-55s
The article reports on a new SCP study revealing that 5.5 million Dutch people now provide informal care (mantelzorg), with men and those ov
Health officials urge weight loss jab users to call 111 if they experience serious side effects
The article warns Brits using weight loss jabs (GLP-1 inhibitors) about a potentially dangerous side effect affecting around 1 in 100 patien
