Renal Parenchymal Tumors
Renal Parenchymal Tumors
Renal Parenchymal Tumors
Histological Classification
• The local extension of the tumor is relatively slow, with a doubling period
of the tumor mass of 500 days, gradually dislocating and disorganizing the
pyelocalyceal cavities, the renal capsule it gets by, involving the perirenal
adipose tissue and developing a neoplastic mass that attaches the kidney
to the adjacent structures (suprarenal gland, liver, duodenum, pancreas,
colon, diaphragm, psoas muscle, lumbar square, etc).
• The venous extension is the evolutional characteristic specific to renal
carcinoma, with the development of tumor thrombus at the level of the
renal vein and inferior vena cava, which may be extended to the level of
the right atrium.
• Secondary determinations. Approximately 33-35% of the patients with
renal carcinoma present with metastases. They develop in veins, lymph or
both, and they appear irrespective of the size of the tumor and its
evolution stage. The most common metastatic sites are: lungs, bone
system, liver, and extra-regional lymph node system.
Diagnosis
Signs and Symptoms Determined
by the Tumor
• Hematuria may be microscopic or macroscopic, total, spontaneous, unique or
repeated, associated with renal colic (the consequence of clot eliminations, with
consecutive ureteral obstructions), isolated or related to other signs. This is the
only symptom in approximately half of the patients, and it represents an essential
sign, which requires further diagnosis investigations. Macroscopic hematuria
appears after the penetration of the tumors in the urinary tracts.
• Pain, seen in approximately 40% of the patients, has different characteristics, but
dull and permanent nephralgia triggered by capsule distension and traction of the
renal pedicle is predominant. In case of abundant hematuria with clots, pain is
manifested by renal colic. It is rarely initial and isolated, being usually
accompanied by hematuria and nephromegaly.
• The tumor mass, which has almost the same percentage as pain, according to its
size and location inside the kidney, is precociously palpated when situated in the
lower polar area, and too late when it is hidden by the diaphragmatic volt and the
costal margins. The tumor has clinical signs of hard, irregular retroperitoneal mass,
with lumbar contact and abdominal bloating, presenting anterior loudness when
small and hidden by the intestinal ansae, opacity when abdominalized by volume,
dislocating the intestine, mobile or not with breathing, other times fixed,
according to extension and neoplastic perinephritis.
Paraneoplastic Syndromes
• Fever is prolonged, permanent, resistant to antibiotics, and without urinary infection or other signs
of infection it is not higher than 38.5 - 390C in plateau.
• Alteration of the general condition with severe weight loss, asthenia, pallor, anemia, anorexia,
signs of deep intoxication etc.
• The hematologic syndrome includes cases with hyperglobulinemia, anemia, and leukemoid
reactions.
• Hepatic affectation. In 1961, Stauffer described a reversible hepatic reaction syndrome associated
with renal parenchymatous carcinoma. The Stauffer syndrome is manifested by non-metastatic
diffuse hepatomegalia, which disappears after the nephrectomy of the kidney with tumor.
• Endocrine forms. Hypercalcemia. The cause of hypercalcemia is the secretion of a parathormon-like
substance in the kidney with tumor. Hypercalcemia leads to intratumoral calcifications and calcium
deposits in the myocardium, brain or periarticular (Sanarelli syndrome). Other endocrine
syndromes that appear along the evolution of renal cancer are: Cushing syndrome, Schwartz-Barter
syndrome, myopathies, IgM paraproteins, protein enteropathy (enteroglucagon), galactorrhea
(prolactin), gynecomastia and decreased libido (gonadotropins), hirsutism, amenorrhea, male
alopecia, etc.
• Cardio-vascular forms are manifested by HTN and heart failure. Systolic high blood pressure (with
normal diastolic pressure), is triggered by the excessive renin secretion by the tumor tissue or by
the normal renal parenchyma ischemiated by tumor compression. In some cases, the tumor
compresses even the trunk of the main renal artery, thus diminishing the renal sanguine flux, as it
also happens in Goldblatt syndrome.
Physical Examination
• In the initial stages, the physical examination
of the patient brings nothing evocative.
• Palpation of the abdominal tumor and cervical
adenopathies are signs of late diagnosis.
• The detection of irreducible varicocel and
edema of the lower members are signs of
venous extension.
Laboratory Exams
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T = primary tumor
TX - primary tumor cannot be evaluated
T0 - there is no evidence of primary tumor
T1 - tumor with maximum diameter 7 cm, limited to the kidney
T1a 4 cm
T1b 4-7 cm
T2 - tumor with maximum diameter 7 cm, limited to the kidney
T2a tumor larger than 7 cm but smaller than 5 cm
T2b tumor larger than 10 cm, limited to the kidney
T3 - tumor extends to the large veins or perinephric adipose tissue,
but it does not invade the suprarenal gland, without going beyond Gerota’s
fascia
T3a - tumor invades the renal vein or the perinephric adipose tissue and/or
the renal sinus, without going beyond Gerota’s fascia
T3b - tumor extension with or without the invasion of the wall in the renal
vein or in vena cava under the diaphragm
T3c - tumor extension with or without the invasion of the wall in vena cava
above the diaphragm or the invasion of the wall of the vena cava
T4 - tumor extends beyond Gerota’s fascia (including continuous
extension in the ipsilateral suprarenal)
N = regional lymph nodes (hilar, para-aortic and
paracaval)
NX - regional lymph nodes cannot be
evaluated
N0 - there are no metastases in the
regional lymph nodes
N1 - metastases in only one regional
lymph node
N2 - metastases in more than one
regional lymph node.
M = distant metastases
MX - distant metastases cannot be
evaluated
M0 - there are no distant metastases
M1 - there are distant metastases
Histopathological G grading:
• Surgery
– Rad. Nephrectomy
– Partial nephrectomy( Nephron sparing surgery)
• Minimal invasive methods (thermal ablative therapy)
• Immunotherapy
• Chemotherapy
• Radiotherapy
• Vaccines & cytokines
• Targated agents
• Hormone therapy
Open
Rad.Neph Lap
Open
Surgical N.S.S Lap
open
modalities
P.C
Minimally Cryoablation
Noninvasive HIFU
ablation
Renal Carcinoma Treatment
Treatment of Localized Renal Carcinomas (stages
I, II and III)
Radical Nephrectomy
The standard procedure for this goal is radical
nephrectomy, which consists in the primary
ligature of the renal artery and vein, with block
excision of the kidney, the adipose tissue and the
suprarenal gland beyond Gerota’s fascia,
associated with regional lymphodissection from
the level of the diaphragmatic hiatus to the level
of the lower mesenteric artery (Robson, 1969).
The choice of the access path depends on the volume
of the tumor, its topography (upper, lower, mediorenal
pole), the presence or absence of adenopathies,
extension in VCI, conformation, age, and biological
condition of the patient. This type of surgical
intervention is usually performed by transperitoneal
approach, by median subcostal incision extended
pararectally, bilateral subcostal – Chevron) or by
thoracoabdominal approach (thoracophreno-
laparotomy).
Surgery- Radical nephrectomy
Gold standard treatment for localized RCC with
contralateral normal kidney, adequate surgical margin.
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Radical nephrectomy
• Robson and colleagues “gold standard”
1969
• Prototype – A then B, Gerota’s intact, ipsi
adrenal, LND (crus to aortic bifurcation)
• Now – no adrenal if: no rad evidence
unless extensive renal involvement,
locally advanced, located upper pole,
immediately adjacent to adrenal
• Surgical approach determined by size,
location of tumor and body habitus
• Transperitoneal
– Subcostal
– thoracoabdominal
• Extraperitoneal
– Flank
• Laparoscopic (trans, retro, hand-assist)
Rad. Nephrectomy
• ORN was the gold std. for localized RCC
• Surgical approach for R.N is determined by size/location of
tumor & pt related factors.
• Disadvantage of Transperitoneal approach is longer post op.
ileus & intra abd. adhesions.
• R. Nephrectomy consists of early control of vasculature and
removing kidney outside G.F with removal of ipsilat Adr. Gland
• Adrenalectomy should be part of R.N for RCC, as risk of
unexpected microscopic invasion of Adr. has been shown to
be as high as 7.5%.
• Therapeutic value of lymph adenectomy remains
controversial.
Lap.Rad.Nephrectomy
• L.R.N :- (a) Transperitoneal
(b) R.Peritoneal
becoming std. T/t for localized T1-2 tumors that
are not suitable to NSS.