“…BCG therapy as such was successfully applied for the first time in the late 1970s, and its use as a treatment modality for bladder cancer has substantially increased to a point where it has now become the standard of care [2][3][4][5][6][7]. Intravesical BCG therapy has been associated with decreased progression and risk of recurrence of the disease and compares favorably with intravesical chemotherapy in this respect [3]. Local and systemic complications have indeed been associated with it, although rarely, including (in descending order of prevalence) fever, hematuria, granulomatous prostatitis, pneumonitis and hepatitis, arthralgia, rash, ureteral obstruction, epididymitis, contracted bladder, renal abscess, sepsis, and cytopenia [7].…”