| Literature DB >> 27437532 |
Malte W Vetterlein1, Tarun Jindal2, Andreas Becker1, Marc Regier3, Luis A Kluth1, Derya Tilki4, Felix K-H Chun5.
Abstract
Over the last decades, there has been a significant stage migration in renal cell carcinoma and especially older patients are getting diagnosed more frequently with low stage disease, such as small renal masses ≤4 cm of size. Considering the particular risk profile of an older population, often presenting with a nonnegligible comorbidity profile and progressive renal dysfunction, treatment approaches beyond aggressive radical surgical procedures have come to the fore. We sought to give a contemporary overview of the available different treatment strategies for incidental small renal masses in an elderly population with the focus on comparative oncological outcomes of nonsurgical and surgical modalities.Entities:
Keywords: Ablation techniques; Aged; Kidney neoplasms; Nephrectomy; Watchful waiting
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27437532 PMCID: PMC4949694 DOI: 10.4111/icu.2016.57.4.231
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Investig Clin Urol ISSN: 2466-0493
Selection of contemporary studies depicting considerations on intervention vs. surveillance for small renal masses in the elderly
| Source | Study population | Main results | Main conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smaldone et al. [ | Systematic review of 880 patients with SRM undergoing active surveillance. | Eighteen patients progressed to metastasis. Those were associated with an increased age, greater initial tumor dimension, and higher linear and volumetric growth rates, as compared to patients without developing metastasis. | A substantial proportion of SRM remained static after initial period of active surveillance. |
| Progression to metastases occurred in a small percentage of patients. | |||
| In patients with competing risks, radiographic surveillance is an acceptable approach. | |||
| Delayed intervention should be reserved for patients who have tumors with significant linear or volumetric growth. | |||
| Mason et al. [ | Prospective multi-institutional study of 82 patients with SRM undergoing active surveillance. | One patient progressed to metastasis. Maximum diameter at diagnosis was the only predictor of tumor growth rate. Masses ≥2.45 cm grow faster than smaller masses. | Most SRM grow slowly and carry low metastatic potential. |
| Initial tumor size predicts tumor growth rate. | |||
| SRM ≥2.45 cm at initial diagnosis grow faster than smaller tumors. | |||
| Kutikov et al. [ | Retrospective SEER-Medicare study of 6,655 patients with localized RCC. | Age and comorbidity score strongly correlated with mortality and predicted other-cause mortality. Patients with localized and node negative RCC had low probability of cancer-specific mortality but higher risks of death from competing causes. | Informed consent treatment decisions must also integrate factors that predict noncancer deaths. |
| Lane et al. [ | Retrospective single-institution study of 537 patients with cT1 RCC at age ≥75 years undergoing different treatment modalities. | Most common cause of death were cardiovascular events, cancer progression caused death in 4%. Age and comorbidity were predictors of overall survival, but not the treatment modality type. | Surgical management in patients with cT1 RCC ≥75 years does not increase overall survival. |
| Patients mostly died of cardiovascular causes similar to the general elderly population. | |||
| Further studies are needed to evaluate the advisability of different treatment options in patients with limited life expectancy. | |||
| Pierorazio et al. [ | Prospective multi-institutional study of 497 patients with SRM undergoing primary vs. delayed intervention. | Equal cancer-specific survival rates at 5 years in both treatment groups. Active surveillance was not predictive of overall or cancer-specific survival in regression models. | Active surveillance with delayed intervention appears to be noninferior with regard to oncological outcomes for well-selected patients with SRM. |
| Patients undergoing active surveillance are older, have more comorbid conditions, and smaller tumors on average. | |||
| Sun et al. [ | Retrospective SEER-Medicare study of 10,595 patients with cT1 RCC undergoing surgical or nonsurgical treatment. | Patients treated with partial or radical nephrectomy had a lower risk of cancer-specific mortality compared to patients undergoing nonsurgical treatment. This difference in mortality vanished in patients ≥75 years. | The harms of surgery need to be weighed against the marginal survival benefit for some patients. |
| The results corroborate recommendations from contemporary guidelines supporting the role of nonsurgical approaches in selected patients. |
RCC, renal cell carcinoma; SEER, Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results; SRM, small renal mass.