Lucas Thornblade, MD Resident Physician Department of Surgery University of Washington
13 month old F Jan presented w/ abdominal distension, pain, fever, constipation -U/S demonstrated bilateral renal masses Feb. – March – six weeks vincristine, dactiomycin, doxorubicin (VDD) Mar. 15 th – bilateral open renal biopsies (R- WT w/o anaplasia, L-intralobular nephrogenic rests) March – May – additional six weeks VDD May 8 th – right radical nephrectomy, left partial nephrectomy, lymphadenectomy -R – stromal type WT w/o anaplasia, direct invasion of adrenal -L – treated nephrogenic rests -negative nodes May 15 th – discharged home, plan for continued chemo
embryonal renal neoplasm -primarily metanephric blastema 7.6 per 1 million children < 15 peak onset at 2 to 3 years Mutations of WT1 WT1 – tumor suppressor gene, 11p13 – zinc finger transcription factor – development of kindey, gonads, spleen, peritoneum
WAGR - Syndrome of WT, aniridia, genitourinary abnormalities and MR Denys-Drash Syndrome Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome Li-Fraumeni Syndrome Perlman Syndrome Frasier Syndrome
incidentally on exam abdominal pain hematuria hypertension 10% - varicocele, hepatomegaly, ascites, CHF
Favorable – blastemal, stromal, epithelial Unfavorable – anaplasia, clear cell sarcoma, rhabdoid tumor blastema anaplasia
Chung, 2012
Accounts for ~5% of Wilms Tumors synchronous or metachronous Management challenge – -maximal renal parenchymal preservation -complete resection for cure of malignancy -historical practice of ablative surgery -resulting renal insufficiency
Bishop (1977) – difference in incidence of renal failure -9% (synch) and 18% (meta) BWT -1% unilateral WT Risk of renal failure -loss of renal parenchyma -hyperfiltration injury -nephrotoxic chemotherapy Recommendation NWTSG for preoperative chemotherapy to avoid total nephrectomy
8 patients with bilateral WT (4 mos – 17 yrs) Mutation screening with Western blot 3 of 8 (37%) found nonsense mutations of WT1 Hu, 2013
Association of earlier presentation of disease with nonsense mutations -loss of the end portion of WT1 leads to more rapid development of tumors compared with SNP’s Hu, 2013
22 patients in a series of 246 WT over 15 years 19 synchronous, 3 metachronous bilateral WT Case series assessed by two treatment arms Sarhan, 2010
Group 1: radical nephrectomy with contralateral nephron sparing surgery (6) Group 2: surgery months after chemo (16) Sarhan, 2010
Preserved renal mass greater in preop chemotherapy group 44% vs. 35% In group 2: 13 of 16 (81%) were down staged following chemotherapy Sarhan, 2010
NWTS-4 (1986 – 1994) 3335 patients 188 bilateral WT (5.6%) retrospective review Hamilton, 2011 Annals of Surgery
23 of 188 developed ESRD (12%) -6 bilateral nephrectomy -8 did not have nephron sparing approach 22 of 188 had <50% renal parenchyma post-operatively *ESRD is significantly higher in BWT than in unilateral patients Hamilton, 2011 Annals of Surgery
Removal of all gross tumor was successful in 118 of 134 (88%) kidneys after parenchymal sparing surgery -local recurrence in 8% Overall survival for stage V cancer 84% -unfavorable histology as adverse prognostic factor *Survival in BWT is lower than all unilateral WT other than stage IV Hamilton, 2011 Annals of Surgery
38 of 188 had progressive or nonresponsive disease after chemotherapy 14% anaplasia in BWT *recommend earlier biopsy if no response to chemotherapy Hamilton, 2011 Annals of Surgery
48% reduction in tumor volume after 4 weeks 68% after 8 weeks *continuing preoperative chemotherapy greater than 12 weeks is unlikely to facilitate resection Hamilton, 2011 Annals of Surgery
Hamilton, 2011 Annals of Surgery
Sarhan, Osama M, El-Baz, Mahmoud, Sarhan, Mohamed M, Ghali, Ahmed M & Ghoneim, Mohamed A Bilateral Wilms' tumors: Single-center experience with 22 cases and literature review. Urology 76: Hamilton, T. E., Ritchey, M. L., Haase, G. M., Argani, P., Peterson, S. M., Anderson, J. R., Green, D. M. & Shamberger, R. C The management of synchronous bilateral Wilms tumor: a report from the National Wilms Tumor Study Group. Ann Surg 253: doi: /SLA.0b013e a0. Hu, M., Fletcher, J., McCahon, E., Catchpoole, D., Zhang, G. Y., Wang, Y. M., Algar, E. M. & Alexander, S. I Bilateral Wilms Tumor and Early Presentation in Pediatric Patients Is Associated with the Truncation of the Wilms Tumor 1 Protein. J Pediatr doi: /j.jpeds Chung, DH Pediatric Surgery. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery: The Biologic Basis of Modern Surgical Practice, 19 th ed. Townsend et al. Saunders/Elsevier Inc.