Back to Search Start Over

Unclassified renal cell carcinoma: an analysis of 85 cases.

Authors :
Karakiewicz PI
Hutterer GC
Trinh QD
Pantuck AJ
Klatte T
Lam JS
Guille F
de La Taille A
Novara G
Tostain J
Cindolo L
Ficarra V
Schips L
Zigeuner R
Mulders PF
Chautard D
Lechevallier E
Valeri A
Descotes JL
Lang H
Soulie M
Ferriere JM
Pfister C
Mejean A
Belldegrun AS
Patard JJ
Source :
BJU international [BJU Int] 2007 Oct; Vol. 100 (4), pp. 802-8.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Objectives: To compare cancer-specific mortality in patients with unclassified renal cell carcinoma (URCC) vs clear cell RCC (CRCC) after nephrectomy, as URCC is a rare but very aggressive histological subtype.<br />Patients and Methods: Eighty-five patients with URCC and 4322 with CRCC were identified within 6530 patients treated with either radical or partial nephrectomy at 18 institutions. Of 85 patients with URCC, 55 were matched with 166 of 4322 for grade, tumour size, and Tumour, Node and Metastasis stages. Kaplan-Meier and life-table analyses were used to address RCC-specific survival. Subsequently, multivariate Cox regression analyses were used to test for differences in RCC-specific survival in unmatched samples.<br />Results: Of patients with URCC, 80% had Fuhrman grades III or IV, vs 37.8% for CRCC. Moreover, 36.5% of patients with URCC had pathologically confirmed nodal metastases, vs 8.6% with CRCC. Finally, 54.1% of patients with URCC had distant metastases at the time of nephrectomy, vs 16.8% with CRCC. Despite these differences in the overall analyses, after matching for tumour characteristics, the URCC-specific mortality rate was 1.6 times higher (P = 0.04) in matched analyses and 1.7 times higher (P = 0.001) in multivariate analyses.<br />Conclusions: These findings indicate that URCC presents with a higher stage and grade, and even after controlling for the stage and grade differences, predisposes patients to 1.6-1.7 times the mortality of CRCC.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1464-4096
Volume :
100
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BJU international
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17822461
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1464-410X.2007.07148.x