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Kidney tumors Petr Klézl Urologická klinika 3. LF UK a FNKV.

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Presentation on theme: "Kidney tumors Petr Klézl Urologická klinika 3. LF UK a FNKV."— Presentation transcript:

1 Kidney tumors Petr Klézl Urologická klinika 3. LF UK a FNKV

2 Kidney tumors - incidence Renal cell carcinoma – 2-3% of all cancers Annual increase of incidence apx. 2% 2007 CZ 34.8: 100 000 men 19.7: 100 000 women Men 1756, women 1039 Peak incidence 60-75 years 1.5:1 ratio men: women Aetiology - smoking, obesity, antihypertensive treatment

3 Renal tumors - diagnosis More than 50% tumors diagnosed incidentally Asymptomatic tumors are generally smaller and of lower stage classic triad (flank pain, gross hematuria, palpable mass) – 6-10% Paraneoplastic symptoms ( hypertension, weight loss, pyrexia, neuromyopathy, anaemia, polycythaemia, amyloidosis, elevated erythrocytes sedimentation rate, abnormal liver function) – apx 20-30% patients About 20-30% of patients with paraneoplastic symptoms present as a result of metastatic disease

4 Kidney tumours - TNM system Tx - Primary tumour cannot be assessed T0 - No evidence of primary tumour T1 - tumour ≤ 7 cm in greatest dimension limited to the kidney T1a tumour < 4 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the kidney T1b tumour > 4 cm but < 7 cm in greatest dimension T2 - tumour > 7 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the kidney T2a tumour > 7 cm in greatest dimension but < 10 cm T2b tumours > 10 cm limited to the kidney T3 - tumour extends into major veins or perinephric tissues, but not into the ipsilateral adrenal gland and not beyond Gerota’s fascia T3a tumour grossly extends into the renal vein or its segmental (muscle-containing) branches, or tumour invades perirenal and/or renal sinus (peripelvic) fat but not beyond Gerota’s fascia T3b tumour grossly extends into the vena cava below diaphragm T3c tumour grossly extends into vena cava or its wall above the diaphragm or invades the wall of the vena cava T4 - tumour invades beyond Gerota’s fascia (including contiguous extension into the ipsilateral adrenal gland)

5 Kidney tumours – TNM system N - Regional lymph nodes NX Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed No regional lymph node metastasis N1Metastasis in a single regional lymph node N2Metastasis in more than one regional lymph node M - Distant metastasis M0 No distant metastasis M1 Distant metastasis G - HISTOPATOLOGICAL GRADING GX differentiation cannot be assed G1 well differentiated G2 intermediate differentiation G3-4 poor differentiated STAGE CLASSIFICATION Stage I T1 N0 M0 Stage II T2 N0 M0 Stage III T3 N0 M0 T1,T2,T3 N1 M0 Stage IV T4 N0, N1 M0 any T N2 M0 any T jakékoliv N M1 http://www.uicc.org/tnm

6 Kidney tumors – histopathological classification Fuhrman nuclear grading Renal cell carcinoma – subtypes - clear cell carcinoma (80-90%) - papillary RCC ( 10-15%) - chromophobe RCC (4-5%) - collecting duct carcinoma (1%)

7 Other renal tumors RCC types account for about 85-90% renal malignancies 10-15% variety of uncomon carcinomas, several benign kidney tumor masses Angiomyolipomas AML– can be differentiated by radiological imaging from RCC AML – surgery, thermal ablation, embolisation Renal cysts – Bosniak classification Oncocytomas – verified by biopsy, follow-up can be considered

8 Kidney tumours - diagnosis CT scan with intravenous contrast - enhancement Ultrasound MRI – alternative to CT scan Chest X-ray Bone scan Brain CT Renal biopsy

9 US - abscessus

10 US – tumour of lower pole

11 Tumour on convexity of kidney

12 Kidney tumours - treatment Nephron-sparing surgery Nephrectomy Ablative therapies Metastasectomy Embolisation Adjuvant therapy ( only clinical trials) Systemic therapy Radiotherapy

13 Localized RCC - treatment nephron-sparing surgery - open partial resection - laparoscopic resection – centres - robotic resection Nephrectomy – when nephron-sparing surgery not indicated - tumour size - unfavourable localization - general health status

14 Nephron – sparing surgery - indications Absolute indications - anatomical or functional solitary kidney - bilateral kidney tumours Relative indications - functioning opposite kidney affected by a condition that may impair renal function - hereditary forms of RCC with high risk developing tumour in contralateral kidney - elective operation – healthy contralateral kidney

15 Kidney tumours – treatment Radical nephrectomy Approach – laparoscopic nephrectomy T1bT2 - open surgery Adrenalectomy Lymphadenectomy

16 T2

17

18 Xantogranulomatous pyelonephitis

19 Open resection of renal tumour

20 Specimen after tumour resection

21 T3b

22 Minimally invasive alternative treatment RFA – radio-frequency ablation cryotherapy Microwave terapie HIFU - Experimental methods - Low morbidity - Risk pacients not fit for surgery - Recurrence rate higher than nephron- sparing surgery

23 Embolization Embolization of primary tumour - gross hematuria - local symptoms – pain - patients unfit for surgical operation - no benefit before radical nephrectomy embolization of metastasis - before resection of major bone metastasis

24 Adjuvant treatment Adjuvant tumour vaccination may improve duration of progression-free survival – high risk pt – T3 Cytokine therapy does not improve survival 3 phase III studies are ongoing – therapy with targeting agents Outside controlled trials no indication for adjuvant therapy

25 Metastasesectomy Complete removal of metastases contributes to improved clinical prognosis Patients with resectable mets and good performance status ( PS)

26 Radiotherapy for metastases Non-resectabel brain metastases Bone mets Symptomatic therapy – pain relief

27 Surgical treatment of metastatic RCC ( mRCC) Cytoreductive nephrectomy – only palliative Meta analysis comparing NE + imunotherapy vs imunotherapy alone – increase of long term survival of patients who underwent nephrectomy No data available for antiangiogenic therapy Cytoreductive nephrectomy is recommended when possible

28 Systemic therapy for mRCC Imunotherapy – IFN-α (patients with PS, preferably sole lung mets) Targeting agents – sunitinib, bevacuzimab, temsirolimus Prognostic criteria (MSCC) Motzer - Karnowsky performance status - Hemoglobin - lactate dehydrogenase - serum calcemia

29 Angiogenesis inhibitor drugs Advances in molecular biology led to development of novel agents Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and platelet –derived growth factor (PDGF) overexpression due to defective VHL protein Tyrosin kinase inhibitors ( TKIs) – Sorafenib, Sunitib, Pazopanib VEGF antibodies – Bevacuzimab Mammalian target of Rapamycin (mTOR)inhibitors –Temsirolimus, Everolimus

30 Systemic therapy - RCC Systemic therapy of mRCC therapy risk and previous therapy recommended agent First - line low and intermediate risk sunitinib bevacizumab + IFN-α high risk temsirolimus Second line prior cytokine therapy sorafenib prior VEGFR therapy everolimus prior mTOR inhibitor therapy clinical trialsdie

31 Surveillance after treatment for RCC Low risk - chest X-ray, US Intermediate risk - chest X-ray, US, CT every 2nd year High risk - chest X-ray, US, CT every year


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