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Clinical features and Surgical Outcome of Clear Cell Papillary Renal Cell Tumor: result from a prospective cohort

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Authors

Kim, Si Hyun; Han, Jang Hee; Jeong, Seung-hwan; Yuk, Hyeong Dong; Ku, Ja Hyeon; Kwak, Cheol; Kim, Hyeon Hoe; Moon, Kyung Chul; Jeong, Chang Wook

Issue Date
2023-03-21
Publisher
BMC
Citation
BMC Urology, 23(1):41
Keywords
Small renal massRenal cell carcinomaNephrectomyPathologySurgical
Abstract
Background
Clear cell papillary renal cell tumor (CCPRCT) was first reported in 2006 a patient with end stage renal disease. After that it was discovered in the kidney without end stage renal disease in the 2010s and started to be mentioned in pathology and urology. The incidence of CCPRCT is low and most of it is discovered incidentally, so there is a lack of reports on clinical characteristics and surgical outcome.
Methods
This study used clinical data from the Seoul National University Prospectively Enrolled Registry for Renal Cell Carcinoma-Nephrectomy (SUPER-RCC-Nx). Between August 2016 and July 2022, patients who underwent radical or partial nephrectomy with clear cell papillary RCC with pathological finding were included in this study. All patients pathologic reports were reviewed by 1 pathologist. Clinical characteristics and surgical outcomes were presented through descriptive statistics, and Kaplan-Meier curve used for survival analysis.
Results
Of the 2057 patients, CCPRCT was reported in 36 patients (1.8%). The median follow up period was 26.8 months. The median age was 67 years, and there were 10 females and 26 males. The median tumor size was 1.2cm. Twenty-nine patients underwent partial nephrectomy. Seven patients with end-stage renal disease underwent radical nephrectomy. The median operative time for patients who underwent partial nephrectomy was 97.5min and the estimated blood loss was 100cc. The median hospital days was 4 and 30-day complications were 2 cases with clavien-dindo classification III or higher. During the follow-up period, there was no recurrence and cancer specific mortality.
Conclusions
The size of CCPRCT was small and there was no advanced stage at that time of diagnosis. There was no recurrence or cancer specific mortality during the follow-up period. A multi-center study with a large scale is needed in the future.
Trial registration
Seoul National University Hospital (SNUH) Institutional Review Board (IRB) (approval number: 2210-126-1371).
ISSN
1471-2490
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/192388
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12894-023-01216-7
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