Cancer Management and Research (May 2013)

Clinical outcome of incidentally discovered small renal cell carcinoma after delayed surgery

  • Sugimoto K,
  • Shimizu N,
  • Oki T,
  • Nose K,
  • Nishioka T,
  • Adomi S,
  • Ohzeki T,
  • Esa A,
  • Uemura H

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2013, no. default
pp. 85 – 89

Abstract

Read online

Koichi Sugimoto,1,2 Nobutaka Shimizu,1 Takashi Oki,2 Kazuhiro Nose,2 Tsukasa Nishioka,2 Shogo Adomi,3 Takayuki Ohzeki,3 Atsunobu Esa,3 Hirotsugu Uemura11Department of Urology, Kinki University Faculty of Medicine, Osaka-Sayama, Osaka, Japan; 2Department of Urology, Sakai Hospital Kinki University Faculty of Medicine, Sakai, Osaka, Japan; 3Department of Urology, NTT West Osaka Hospital, Osaka, Osaka, JapanBackground: This study was undertaken to investigate the growth rate and clinical outcome of patients with a small renal mass (SRM) after delayed surgery.Methods: We reviewed the clinical records of 34 patients with SRMs ≦ 4 cm at diagnosis, who underwent delayed surgical intervention during surveillance from January 2000 to December 2011. Radiographic evaluations using computed tomography (CT) scan and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were performed at least every 6 months, and the tumor size was determined at least twice.Results: The mean follow-up time was 26.6 ± 18.6 months and mean tumor doubling time was 23.4 ± 16.0 months. Histopathological analysis revealed that 32 of the 34 patients were malignant in pT1aN0M0. Only one patient showed tumor recurrence, who subsequently died due to tumor progression.Conclusion: The growth rate of the small renal mass was slow in the majority of our patients. Delayed intervention does not have a detrimental effect on cancer-specific outcomes.Keywords: renal cell carcinoma, small renal mass, natural history, growth rate, delayed intervention