Pro Football Hall of Famer Deion Sanders is making headlines after revealing he was diagnosed with an aggressive form of bladder cancer earlier this year.

He said he had surgery to remove the organ and is now considered cured by his doctors.

“It does bring great awareness to bladder cancer, like you mentioned, since it's not commonly spoken about,” Dr. Joshua Jue, a robotic and minimally invasive urologic surgeon with the Palm Beach Health Network, said.

Sanders’s bladder cancer diagnosis is causing many people to ask more questions about the disease, which is the 10th most common cancer in the U.S.

“The hallmark would be painless blood in the urine, especially with tobacco smoking history. Tobacco smoking history is the single most important factor, along with older age, that are ri

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