1. Predicting Oncologic Outcomes in Small Renal Tumors
- Author
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Payal Kapur, Hua Zhong, Ellen Araj, Alana Christie, Qi Cai, David Kim, Jeffrey Miyata, Vanina T. Tcheuyap, Olivia Brandenburg, Deyssy Carrillo, Ivan Pedrosa, James Brugarolas, and Jeffrey A. Cadeddu
- Subjects
Oncology ,Urology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Surgery - Abstract
Most patients diagnosed with renal cancer today present with small renal masses (SRMs). Although these patients have a low risk of dying from their disease and many are followed with active surveillance protocols, a small subset of renal cell carcinomas (RCCs) behave aggressively. Knowledge regarding features of aggressive behavior would enable better adoption of active surveillance strategies among these patients.We sought to improve prognostic models to predict metastasis-free survival after nephrectomy through focused analyses of clinicopathologic characteristics of SRMs associated with adverse outcomes.We identified consecutive patients with surgically resected SRMs (≤4 cm) at the University of Texas Southwestern Kidney Cancer Program between 1998 and 2020. In addition, we evaluated the ability of SRMs to form tumors when implanted in mice, an indicator of tumor aggressiveness.We examined the clinicopathologic factors associated with metastasis including prospectively performed BAP1 immunohistochemistry at our Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments laboratory. Multivariable Cox proportional hazard regression was used to predict metastasis-free survival.A total of 3900 evaluable nephrectomies (from 3674 ethnically diverse patients) were identified, of which 1984 (51%) were SRMs including 1720 RCC. Of these patients with RCC (SRMWe identified clinicopathologic features that influence metastasis-free survival for patients with SRMWe report the identification of features of aggressiveness in small renal tumors that influence the likelihood of metastases after surgery.
- Published
- 2022
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