European Urology Open Science (Oct 2022)

Robotic Partial Nephrectomy with En Bloc Removal of a Renal Vein Thrombus for Multiple cT3a Renal Cell Carcinoma Lesions

  • Antonio Andrea Grosso,
  • Diego Marcos Marìn,
  • Fabrizio Di Maida,
  • Maria Lucia Gallo,
  • Luca Lambertini,
  • Samuele Nardoni,
  • Andrea Mari,
  • Andrea Minervini

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44
pp. 33 – 36

Abstract

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Partial nephrectomy (PN) may be recommended for selected patients with advanced-stage (>cT2) renal cell carcinoma (RCC) with the aim of avoiding dialysis and chronic kidney disease–related comorbidities. The spread of robotic surgery has led to expansion of PN indications to more challenging scenarios and even frontier surgeries, including advanced-stage RCC. Here we describe the management of a patient with a solitary kidney diagnosed with multiple cT3a (renal vein thrombus) RCC who was treated using a conservative robotic approach. The most crucial surgical considerations for this procedure were: (1) tailored planning of the surgical approach using three-dimensional reconstruction software; (2) accurate boundary delineation for the tumors and thrombus; (3) avoiding unnecessary warm ischemia time; (4) performing an anatomical excision to follow eventual tumor bulging; and (5) en bloc removal of the main lesion and its thrombus. No perioperative complications were recorded. Histopathology revealed clear cell RCC for all four lesions with nucleolar grade 3 and negative surgical margins. At 12-mo follow-up the patient was disease-free. When performed by an experienced surgeon, PN plus venous thrombus excision for imperative cases with cT3 RCC may represent a valid treatment option with valuable oncological and functional outcomes. Patient summary: We describe the case of patient who had a single kidney with multiple kidney tumors and tumor extension into a blood vessel. The patient was treated with robot-assisted removal of the tumors, sparing as much kidney tissue as possible. This technique was found to be safe and effective, with no complications and good intermediate-term results.

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