Case Reports in Oncology (Oct 2009)

Primary Synovial Sarcoma of the Kidney

  • Takashi Kawahara,
  • Zenkichi Sekiguchi,
  • Kazuhide Makiyama,
  • Takashi Nakayama,
  • Yoji Nagashima,
  • Kaoru Kita,
  • Kazuhiro Namura,
  • Hiroki Itou,
  • Futoshi Sano,
  • Narihiko Hayashi,
  • Noboru Nakaigawa,
  • Takehiko Ogawa,
  • Hiroji Uemura,
  • Masahiro Yao,
  • Yoshinobu Kubota

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000245926
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 189 – 193

Abstract

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The case was a 40-year-old female. She visited a local doctor with a chief complaint of right side abdominal pain. A right kidney tumor measuring 10 cm in diameter was observed in an abdominal Computed Tomography (CT) scan. Based on the CT image, the possibility of angiomiolipoma (AML) could not be ruled out, but a high maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax) of 7.8 was observed in a Positron Emission Tomography CT (PET-CT) scan and there was a possibility of malignancy. We therefore performed a transperitoneal right radial nephrectomy. Although adhesion of the tumor to the duodenum and the inferior vena cava was observed, it was possible to perform an excision. The tumor accounted for a large proportion of the excised kidney; the surrounding areas had taken on a cyst-like structure, and the interior comprised grayish brittle tissue exhibiting solid growth. Histologically, gland-like and cyst-like structures composed of cylindrical cuboidal cells and mainly characterized by the solid growth of short fusiform-shaped and oval-shaped basophilic cells were observed, and we believed it was a synovial sarcoma. There were no malignant findings in the adrenal gland. There have been approximately 30 reported cases around the world of synovial sarcoma that developed in the kidney, and we herein report this case with bibliographic considerations.

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