| Literature DB >> 31952297 |
Nicolae Bacalbasa1,2,3, Irina Balescu4, Mihaela Vilcu1,5, Simona Dima3, Camelia Diaconu1,6, Laura Iliescu1,7, Alexandru Filipescu1,8, Iulian Brezean1,5.
Abstract
Introduction: Extended pelvic resection might be the option of choice in patients presenting locally advanced cervical cancer. However, the possibility of a co-existence of an ectopic, pelvic kidney that is invaded by such a tumor is extremely rare. Case Presentation: A 54-year-old female patient, diagnosed with locally advanced cervical cancer in the presence of a pelvic kidney, was submitted to surgery with curative intent. A large, abscessed cervical tumor invading the urinary bladder and the rectum was found, so a total exenteration was planned. Intraoperatively, tumor invasion of the left kidney, which was found in an ectopic, pelvic position was also encountered; therefore, total pelvic exenteration in association with a left nephrectomy was successfully performed. Conclusions: The presence of an ectopic, pelvic disposition of the kidney makes it susceptible to be invaded by locally advanced pelvic tumors; in such cases, a nephrectomy might also be needed.Entities:
Keywords: ectopic kidney; locally advanced cervical cancer; nephrectomy
Year: 2020 PMID: 31952297 PMCID: PMC7022794 DOI: 10.3390/medicina56010033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Figure 1Initial intraoperative aspect: Large pelvic tumor invading the left kidney with a pelvic location.
Figure 2The aspect after tumoral mobilization—presence of ureteral invasion as well as renal invasion.
Figure 3The aspect after rectal sectioning and posterior dissection of the tumor.
Figure 4The final aspect after mobilization of the tumor en bloc with the left kidney and lymph node dissection.
Relevant studies presenting a pelvic kidney in association with cervical cancer.
| Name, Year | Age of the Patient (Years) | Presumed FIGO Stage—Preoperatively | Histopathological Type | Therapeutic Strategy | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bakri, 1993 [ | 65 | IIB | Squamous cell carcinoma | Per primam surgery—radical abdominal hysterectomy en bloc with left parametrectomy, left ureteral resection and reimplantation into the urinary bladder using a Boari flap technique | Alive without recurrence at 6 years after surgery |
| Roth, 2003 [ | 48 | IIB | Squamous cell carcinoma | Per primam surgery—anterior exenteration without vaginal reconstruction and distal ileal conduit | No evidence of disease at 14 months follow-up |
| Lataifeh,2007 [ | 50 | IIB | Adenocarcinoma | Definitive radio-chemotherapy—4500 cGy and cisplatin with curative intent for 9 weeks | Disease free at two years follow-up, normal renal function |
| Ripley, 1995 [ | NR | IB | Adenocarcinoma of the cervix in a previously kidney transplanted patient | Definitive external radiotherapy—4000 cGy and intracavitary radiotherapy with curative intent for 6.5 weeks | NR |
FIGO, International Federation of Obstetrics and Gynecology; IIB, Cervical carcinoma invades beyond the uterus, but not to the lower third of the vagina or to the pelvic wall with parametrial invasion; IB, Invasive carcinoma with measured deepest invasion ≥5.0 mm, limited to the cervix uteri; NR, not reported.