Literature DB >> 34295761

Surveillance for low-risk kidney cancer: a narrative review of contemporary worldwide practices.

Helen Wei Cui1, Mark Edward Sullivan1.   

Abstract

The management trend of low-risk kidney cancer over the last decade has been from treatment with radical nephrectomy, to use of nephron sparing procedures of partial nephrectomy and ablation, as well as the option of active surveillance (AS). This narrative review aims to summarise the available guidelines related to AS and review the published descriptions of regional practices on the management of low-risk kidney cancer worldwide. A search of PubMed, Google Scholar and Cochrane Library databases for studies published 2010 to June 2020 identified 15 studies, performed between 2000 and 2019, which investigated 13 different cohorts of low-risk kidney cancer patients on AS. Although international guidelines show a level of agreement in their recommendation on how AS is conducted, in terms of patient selection, surveillance strategy and triggers for intervention, cohort studies show distinct differences in worldwide practice of AS. Prospective studies showed general agreement in their predefined selection criteria for entry into AS. Retrospective studies showed that patients who were older, with greater comorbidities, worse performance status and smaller tumours were more likely to be managed with AS. The rate of percutaneous renal mass biopsy varied between studies from 2% to 56%. The surveillance protocol was different across all studies in terms of recommended modality and frequency of imaging. Of the 6 studies which had set indications for intervention, these were broadly in agreement. Despite clear criteria for intervention, patient or surgeon preference was still the reason in 11-71% of cases of delayed intervention across 5 studies. This review shows that AS is being applied in a variety of centres worldwide and that key areas of patient selection criteria and surveillance strategy have large similarities. However, the rate of renal mass biopsy and of delayed intervention varies significantly between studies, suggesting the process of diagnosing malignant SRM and decision making whilst on AS are varying in practice. Further research is needed on the diagnosis and characterisation of incidentally found small renal masses (SRM), using imaging and histology, and the natural history of these SRM in order to develop evidence-based active surveillance protocols. 2021 Translational Andrology and Urology. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Kidney neoplasms; active surveillance; guidelines; practice; small renal mass

Year:  2021        PMID: 34295761      PMCID: PMC8261444          DOI: 10.21037/tau-20-1295

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transl Androl Urol        ISSN: 2223-4683


Introduction

Low-risk kidney cancer, in the context of this review, is defined as either: clinical stage T1a renal cell carcinoma with a localised renal tumour ≤4 cm, or a kidney tumour suspected to be malignant based on imaging, of size ≤4 cm (also referred to as a small renal mass or SRM), or a Bosniak III or IV complex cyst (1). The understanding of the natural history, prognosis and treatment outcomes for low-risk kidney cancer has improved with the use of retrospective and more recently, large, prospective observational studies, leading to recent changes in the guidelines on the management of these tumours. The most significant change in management has been the shift in emphasis to partial nephrectomy (PN) as the recommended surgical treatment for SRM in place of radical nephrectomy (RN), based on the evidence for non-inferior oncological outcomes and the potential benefit of preserving nephrons (2,3). In addition to the increased uptake of PN, there has been increasing interest in surveillance as an active management strategy for small renal masses, given the evidence for their natural history to be indolent, slow growing and of limited metastatic potential (4). Surveillance may also be of greater benefit to more elderly and comorbid patients who have competing risks for mortality, for which operative primary intervention (PI) may be considered overtreatment (5). Given the prominence of AS in the management of the SRM and the lack of consensus on the standards for AS, this review aims to summarise the most recent international guidelines pertaining to AS, and to compare the practice of AS worldwide within the last 2 decades by comparing studies with AS cohorts. The specific areas compared were the selection criteria and decision-making processes for choosing AS compared to surgical or ablative treatment, the role of renal mass biopsy (RMB), the strategy employed for surveillance and the outcomes of AS in terms of delayed intervention (DI) and survival.

Search strategy

Understanding of contemporary worldwide practice was gained from a search of the guidelines from worldwide urological associations as well as a literature search for studies documenting AS cohorts. Urological associations listed on the Urological Worldwide Society Database (accessed from www.auanet.org/education/international-societies) were searched for whether they had a published guideline accessible online. If a published guideline or recommendation from a regional urological association could be found, this was included as the example of practice for that region. A literature search of studies published in English, with full text available, in the period 2010 to June 2020 which provide evidence for contemporary practice was conducted. We searched the PubMed, Google Scholar and the Cochrane Library databases using the following medical subject heading terms ‘kidney neoplasms’, ‘localised’ or ‘small renal mass’, and ‘practice’, ‘with or without delayed intervention’ to identify all full text articles, in English, reporting on the observation of suspected low-risk renal cancers, with study periods from 2000 onwards. Cited references were searched and retrieved for potentially eligible publications containing cohorts of AS patients. All paediatric renal cancer, and studies which included greater than cT1 (>7 cm) tumours, were excluded. Study titles and abstracts were reviewed to identify all series that analysed management of localised renal tumours and discussed their natural history or outcomes of surveillance, with, or without comparison to other treatment. The following data was extracted from the studies: definition of low-risk kidney cancer, period of study, baseline and clinical characteristics of study population, patient selection criteria, surveillance protocol, proportion of patients who had RMB, triggers for delayed intervention, and clinical outcomes during follow-up.

Findings

Search results of the international guidelines

The Urological Worldwide Society Database listed 98 urological bodies (6). Separate European and USA organisations were not counted as these were represented by the European Association of Urology (EAU) and American Urological Society (AUA). Online published guidelines were available for 8 organisations: EAU (7), AUA (8), European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) (9), Canadian Urological Association (CUA) (10), Japanese Urological Association (JUA) (11), Taiwan Urological Association, Confederacion Americana de Urologia (CAU), Argentinian Urological Society (12) and the Saudi Urological Association (13). The guidelines for the region of Taiwan refers to the EAU guidelines, and the urological societies of the countries of South America represented by the CAU was the same as the AUA guidelines. Further recommendations for the Latin American Renal Cancer Group were found during the literature search (14). Therefore, 7 sets of guidelines were reviewed and recommendations regarding active surveillance are summarised in .
Table 1

Summary of recommendations from 7 worldwide regional urological organisations with published guidelines

International bodyGuideline yearDefinitionRecommendations for role of renal mass biopsyRecommendations regarding management/ASProtocol for follow-up for AS patients
European Association of Urology (1)2020cT1aBefore ablation treatment. In select patients who are considering ASOffer active surveillance, radiofrequency ablation or cryoablation to frail and/or comorbid patients with small renal masses. Treat Bosniak III cysts the same as RCC or offer AS. Treat Bosniak IV cysts the same as RCCNot mentioned
American Urological Association (8)2017‘small solid’ ‘Bosniak III or IV complex cysts’For lesions suspected to be non-malignant. Before thermal ablation. Not required for (I) young or healthy patients who are unwilling to accept the uncertainties associated with RMB; or (II) older or frail patients who will be managed conservatively independent of RMB findingsAS can be considered for suspicious renal masses, especially those smaller than 2 cm. Prioritise AS or watchful waiting when risk of intervention or competing risk of death outweigh oncological benefit of active treatmentRepeat imaging 3–6 months to assess for interval growth. Use cross sectional imaging and/or US. May consider RMB for additional risk stratification. Trigger for treatment: tumour size >3 cm, growth rate >5 mm/year, stage progression, clinical change in patient/tumour factors
European Society for Medical Oncology (9)2019<4 cm solid tumourRecommended for select patients with small masses for ASAS is an option in elderly patients with significant comorbidities or those with short life expectancy. Otherwise PN is recommended for T1 <7 cm tumoursNot mentioned
Canadian Urological Association (Kidney Cancer Research Network of Canada) (10)2015cT1a ‘<4cm’Perform if changes management. Perform before, or at the time of, ablation for SRM. Is not yet standard practice in CanadaActive surveillance with radiographic follow up should be primary consideration in elderly and infirm patients at high risk of intervention and limited life expectancyCT 3-monthly in year 1, 6-montly in year 2–3, yearly thereafter
Can use ultrasound +/- contrast enhancement
Japanese Urological Association (11)2011, 2007cT1aNot mentionedPartial nephrectomy or nephrectomyN/A
Ablation or cryotherapy is an option
Latin American Renal Cancer group (14)2019‘small renal mass’ not otherwise definedRecommend biopsy when patients are candidates for ASPN should be applied in most patients with an SRM. AS used an alternative for suspicious masses, particularly those smaller than 3 cm. AS preferred when risks of intervention or the competing risks of death outweigh benefit to patient. AS preferential for: elderly, life expectancy <5 years, frailty, multiple comorbidities, marginal renal function, tumour growth of <5 mm/year, or well differentiated histologyCT or MRI or US every 3–6 months for 2 years to establish an acceptable linear growth rate (<0.5 cm per year). Subsequently, annual imaging every 6–12 months
Sociedad Argentina de Urología (12)2010Renal mass less than 2 cmFor lesions suspected to be non-malignantOption of observation or consideration of surgery, preferably partial nephrectomyNot mentioned
Saudi Urology Association (13)2015cT1aRMB strongly recommended before non-surgical options e.g., ablation and ASRecommended treatment is surgery preferably partial nephrectomy. Active surveillance and ablation not recommended unless significant comorbidities that interdict surgeryNot mentioned

AS, active surveillance; CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PN, partial nephrectomy; RMB, renal mass biopsy; SRM, small renal mass; US, ultrasound.

AS, active surveillance; CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PN, partial nephrectomy; RMB, renal mass biopsy; SRM, small renal mass; US, ultrasound.

Summary of guidelines from urological associations

Results of the guidelines available on recommendations for AS and the worldwide practice of management of SRM and AS show many similarities, although this is skewed towards guidelines and practice pertaining to North America and Europe. The EAU, ESMO and CUA relate to cT1a renal tumours, whereas the AUA emphasises a recommendation for AS in renal tumours less than 2 cm. In terms of patient selection, the EAU, AUA, ESMO and Latin American Renal Cancer group guidelines recommend AS for comorbid patients and elderly patients, with the rationale that primary intervention is likely to outweigh oncological benefit. No AS imaging protocol is specified in the EAU or ESMO guidelines, whereas the AUA, CUA and Latin American Renal Cancer group all have similar imaging protocols of more intensive imaging 3 to 6-monthly in the first year, with longer intervals thereafter. Only the AUA guidelines provide more specific definitions for progression as a trigger to treatment (more than 5 mm growth per year or to more than 3cm or change in clinical stage or patient factors). The recommendation for RMB vary between guidelines. The EAU, AUA, CUA and Saudi Urology Association guidelines recommend RMB before ablation treatment for SRM. For patients being considered for AS, RMB is recommended by the Latin American Renal Cancer group, and strongly recommended by the Saudi Urology Association guidelines, and recommended for select AS patients in the EAU and ESMO guidelines. The AUA and Argentinian Society of Urology guidelines also recommend RMB for suspected non-malignant lesions.

Search results of studies pertaining to worldwide practice

We identified 181 unique citations; of these 144 were excluded after review of the abstract due to reasons of: not containing the population of interest, study period starting before 2000, review articles, commentaries or studies without relevant clinical data on both patient characteristics and outcomes. Full text screening was carried out in 37 articles, of which 21 were excluded, resulting in 16 included articles (of which 2 are conference abstracts) covering 13 different patient cohorts represented in 15 studies (15-30). Numerous studies have been published using the large United States datasets of DISSRM (Delayed Intervention and Surveillance for Small Renal Masses registry) (31-36), SEER (Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results program) (37-41) and the National Cancer Database (42,43), of which, the most relevant articles for this review have been chosen. Regions represented were North America, United Kingdom, Israel, and South Korea. The DISSRM study data is represented twice in to distinguish data available from the full text article published in 2015 (20) and the updated data published in a 2020 abstract (21). The Oxford study combines data from the 2012 published full text article (which contained an AS cohort of 71 patients only) (23) and the 2020 updated abstract (which contained a cohort of 208 patients with SRM undergoing AS, PN or RN) (24).
Table 2

Overview of studies of renal cancer active surveillance cohorts. The two studies from the University of Michigan report on different samples of patients from the same database

StudyCountryStudy typeStudy periodDefinition of SRMPatient no. with SRMPatient no. on AS (%)% with RMBFollow up (median)% of AS patient with progression*% of AS patients who had delayed interventionOutcomes on AS
Studies with no follow up
   University of Michigan, 2012 (15)USARetrospective analysis of prospectively entered SRM database2009–2010cT120473/204 (36%)41% (30/73)n/an/an/an/a
   Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, 2013 (16)USARetrospective analysis of prospectively entered kidney tumour database2005–2011cT1969266/969 (26%)n/rn/an/an/an/a
   National Cancer Database (NCDB), 2019 (17)USARetrospective sample2004–2015cT1a or pT1a75,6916,228/75,691 (8%)n/rn/an/an/an/a
Studies with follow up
   Cleveland Clinic, 2010 (18)USARetrospective analysis of prospectively entered kidney tumour database2000–2006cT1537105/537 (20%)2.3% (13/537)3.9 yearsn/rn/rCancer-specific mortality not significantly associated with management type (RN vs. PN vs. AS)
   University of Toronto, 2011 (19)Canada (3 centres)Prospective AS cohort2001–2009cT1n/a828.5% (7/82)3 yearsn/a15% (12/82)1/82 developed metastases after 18 months of follow-up; 8.6% (7/82) died from other causes
   DISSRM, 2015, (20)USA (3 centres)Prospective SRM registry2009–2014cT1a497223/497 (45%)6.4% (32/497)2.1 years16% (36/223)9% (21/223)AS was not predictive of OS or CSS at 5 years
   DISSRM, 2020 (21)USAProspective SRM registry2009–2019cT1a785437/785 (56%)n/r3.3 years25% (110/437)15% (67/437)At 10 years: no difference in CSS between PI and AS groups, however OS was higher in PI (83%) vs. AS (58%)
   Canada (Renal Cell Carcinoma Consortium), 2011 (22)Canada (8 centres)Prospective non-comparative clinical trial of AS2004–2009cT1an/a17856% (99/178)—all patients asked to undergo RMB2.3 years15% (27/178)5% (9/178) (In addition, 16 withdrawn patients also had DI)2 patients progressed to metastatic disease at 5 and 12 months
   Oxford, 2012, (23), 2020 (24)UKRetrospective analysis of local cancer database2005–2010cT1a solid or Bosniak IV20876/208 (37%)7.5%9.4 years12%18% (14/76)7.8% developed metastatic disease. No statistically significant difference in OS and CSS between AS and RN or PN groups
   Haifa (Bnai Zion Medical Center), 2015 (25)IsraelRetrospective analysis of AS cohort2003–2013cT1an/a704% (3/70)2.8 years59%10% (7/70)No cases of metastases
   University of Michigan, 2016 (26)USARetrospective analysis of AS cohort2009–2011cT1an/a11843% (51/118)2.5 years6.7% (8/118)24% (28/118)1 case (0.8%) of metastases; 8 deaths not related to SRM
   Pusan National University, 2017 (27)South KoreaProspective AS cohort2010–2016SRM <3 cmn/a3732% (12/37) (mainly whilst on surveillance for rapid growth rate)2.3 years16% (6/37)8% (3/37)No cases of metastases or cancer specific death
   Tayside (Urological Cancers Network), 2017 (28)UKRetrospective AS cohort2007–2014SRM (solid or cystic) ≤4 cmn/a226 (Solid =158, Cystic =68)15.6%1.8 years46%19% (43/226)4.4% (7/158) metastasized
   SEER, 2018 (29)   USARetrospective SRM cohort2002–2011cT1a102181978/10218 (19.4%)n/rn/rn/rn/rCSS and OS significantly lower for AS group compared with TA and PN group; CSS similar between AS and RN groups
   MD Anderson Cancer Center, Texas, 2019 (30)   USAProspective AS cohort2005–2016SRM ≤4 cmn/a27245% (123/272)4.8 yearsn/r24% (64/272)9.3 years median OS; 98% 5-year CSS. Metastases and death in 4 cases after 2 years

*Definitions of ‘progression’ differ between studies, see for progression criteria used; †Abstract only. AS, active surveillance; CSS, cancer specific survival; DI, delayed intervention; OS, overall survival; PN, partial nephrectomy; RMB, renal mass biopsy; RN, radical nephrectomy; SRM, small renal mass; TA, thermal ablation.

*Definitions of ‘progression’ differ between studies, see for progression criteria used; †Abstract only. AS, active surveillance; CSS, cancer specific survival; DI, delayed intervention; OS, overall survival; PN, partial nephrectomy; RMB, renal mass biopsy; RN, radical nephrectomy; SRM, small renal mass; TA, thermal ablation.
Table 3

Surveillance strategy and outcomes of delayed intervention. Studies without follow up not shown

StudyImaging modality usedFrequency of imagingDefinition of progressionIndications for interventionMean growth rate of SRM on AS (cm/year)% of SRM on AS showing no growth/decrease in sizeIntervention rateMedian time to interventionReasons for interventionFinal histology after DI
Cleveland Clinic (18)Not specified6-monthlyn/rn/rn/rn/rn/rn/rn/rn/r
University of Toronto (19)CT/MRI/US according to patient body habitus and physician preference6-monthlyn/rNo predefined criteria for intervention0.2515%14.6% (12/82)27 months25% (3/12) due to improvement in comorbidities; Patient choice 50% (6/12); Rapid growth 50% (6/12) - mean of 1.07 cm/yrAll found to have RCC
DISSRM, 2015 (20)US preferred. Axial imaging if any discrepancy in tumour size or growth rate, or US poor quality or change in tumour appearanceInitially 4–6-monthly for 2 years, then every 6–12 monthsn/rGrowth rate >0.5 cm/yr or Size >4 cm or Patient choice at any time0.11*10%9.4% (21/223)n/rPatient preference 46% (15/21) with average GR 0.08cm/yr; 29% (6/21) met progression criteria with average GR 1.1 cm/yr67% RCC in patient preference group
83% RCC in DI due to progression group
Canada (22)CT/MRI/USInitially at 3 and 6 months, then 6-monthly for 3 years, then annuallySRM growth ≥4 cm, or doubling of SRM volume in ≤12 months, or metastasesSame as progression criteria0.1336%5% (9/178) (In addition, 16 withdrawn patients also had DI)n/rAll due to progressionAll had RCC who had PN or RN for DI (All 16 withdrawn patients who had DI also had RCC on final histology)
Oxford, 2012 (23)CT / MRI / USNo prospectively established AS protocolImaging every 3-6 monthsn/rRecommended to have treatment if size >4 cm or had rapid tumour growth rates0.2153%19.7% (14/71)29 monthsIncrease in size 64% (9/14); Patient choice 29% (4/14); Change in diagnosis 7% (1/14)n/r
Haifa (25)CT/MRI in the first year. Alternating CT or MRI with US in second year6-monthlyn/rHigh growth rate or size >4 cm or patient or doctor preference0.1731%10% (7/70)25.9 monthsNot specifiedRCC 5/7, Oncocytoma 2/7
University of Michigan, 2016 (26)Cross-sectional imaging for first 2 years. CT/MRI/US thereafter Modality at discretion of urologistInstitutional protocol for AS: every 5–6 months for 2 yearsInterval at discretion of urologist 6 to 12-monthly thereaftern/rNo defined criteria for delayed intervention initially. Subsequent criteria to include growth, rate >0.5 cm/year, size >4cm0.2036%24% (28/118)24 monthsPatient preference 11%; Growth rate ≥5 mm/year 53%; Surgeon recommendation despite not meeting criteria 36%Not detailed
Pusan National University (27)Abdominal CT or US and chest CT6-monthly intervalsThen if no change in size, annual follow upPredefined criteria: Growth rate >0.5 cm/yr or Size >4 cm or Clinical progressionProgression criteria met or Patient choice0.20n/r8% (3/37)n/r100% (3/3) due to progression of growth rate >0.5 cm/yrAll 3/3 had RCC
Tayside (28)Mostly used CT. A few patients had US follow-up with conversion to CT if US showed growth or poor visualisationn/rTumour growth defined as any increase in size on interval imagingSurgery offered for solid SRM >4 cm or Patient or surgeon choice when <4 cm or Younger patients with reluctance to follow-up0.2953.5% (94% of cystic SRM showed no growth, 36% of solid SRM showed no growth)19% (43/226)n/rn/rn/r
MD Anderson (30)CT/MRI6-monthlyn/rGrowth rate of SRM >0.5 cm/yr or Size >4 cm or Patient choice0.24 (from baseline to 2-year scan)n/r24% (64/272)n/rPatient choice 47% (14/30) within first 2 years of AS; Increasing size 61% (19/31) after 2 years of ASn/r

*value is median. AS, active surveillance; CT, computed tomography; DI, delayed intervention; GR, growth rate; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PN, partial nephrectomy; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; RN, radical nephrectomy; SRM, small renal mass; US, ultrasound.

Studies pertaining to worldwide practice

Fifteen studies covering 13 different datasets are summarised in , of which the vast majority relate to North American practice. The University of Michigan published two separate studies using the same SRM database (15,26). The earlier study included all SRM and the later study included patients on AS only. Two articles relate to the DISSRM registry, one published in 2015 (20) and an updated abstract published in 2020 (21). The two studies published from Canada may represent some overlap of patient samples as some centres were used in both studies. The University of Toronto study (19) included 82 patients with cT1 renal masses from 3 centres, whereas the RCC Consortium study included 178 patients with cT1a renal masses from 8 centres (22). Three studies [University of Michigan 2012 (15), Fox Chase Cancer Center (16), National Cancer Database (NCDB) (17)] looked at population trends and characteristics of patients on AS with no follow up data. Of the other 11 studies with follow up data, 7 studies [University of Toronto (19), Canada Renal Cell Carcinoma (RCC) Consortium (22), Haifa (25), University of Michigan 2016 (26), Pusan National University (27), Tayside (28), MD Anderson (30)] included AS patients only, and the remaining studies [Cleveland Clinic (18), DISSRM (20,21), Oxford (23), SEER (29)] included patients on SRM who underwent a variety of treatments including RN, PN and ablation. Most of the studies are retrospective analyses of prospectively entered databases of SRM or AS patients, with two studies of population databases using the SEER Medicare linked database (29) and the NCDB (17), both from USA. The only prospectively recruited clinical trial, which was non-comparative, was the Canada RCC Consortium study (22). Other prospectively enrolled AS cohorts were from the University of Toronto (19), Pusan National University (27), Tayside Urological Cancers Network (28), Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center (30) and the DISSRM registry (20,21).

Trends in the management of SRM

Evidence of management trends of SRM over the last 2 decades can be gained from analysis of patient databases from the United States. The NCDB study (17) showed that, between 2004 and 2015, of the 75,691 patients found with cT1a renal mass, 8% were managed with AS. The SEER study (29) showed that 19.4% of the 10,218 patients with cT1a renal mass were managed with AS. The main findings from analysis of several studies using the NCDB and SEER data is that surgery is the mainstay of treatment for stage 1 kidney tumours, and PN uptake has increased dramatically in recent years in all age groups, except in the 90+ age group, with lower rates of increase in use of ablation and largely static uptake of AS, even in older age groups (17,39,42,44). Analysis of recorded renal cancers NCDB for the period 1993 to 2007 showed the use of PN for stage 1 renal tumours increased from 6.3% to 32% (44), with a further increase in use of PN for T1a tumours to 57% by 2015 (17), with similar trends found from analysis of the SEER registry from 1998–2008 (39). Conversely, the use of AS for T1a tumours was stable between 2004 (7.3%) to 2015 (8.2%) across all age groups (17). Over this period, approximately 10% of 70–79-year olds, and 30% of 80–89 year olds were managed with AS with no significant change in trend in use of AS over these years, in contrast to increasing rates of PN and ablation (17). This lag in growth of AS compared to PN and ablation in all age groups suggests that urologists were continuing to opt for primary intervention for SRM, and this may be resulting in an overtreatment of the SRM for those suitable for AS (17,45). This may also have been influenced by the increased uptake of robotic partial nephrectomy which has outpaced the adoption of AS for SRM (45).

Patient selection into AS

Selection criteria for AS

An overview of important patient characteristics and selection criteria is detailed in . Only one DISSRM publication from 2015 is included in to illustrate patient selection criteria for this study. The SEER study is not included as it contained no information on patient selection for AS. Information on how patients were selected for AS varied between studies depending on whether they included retrospective analyses of patient cohorts, or if the study had specific inclusion and exclusion criteria for enrolment into an AS protocol. Three prospective AS cohort studies [Canada (22), University of Toronto (19), MD Anderson (30)] had specific criteria or recommendations for eligibility for AS which were broadly in agreement. The selection criteria for patients to be managed with AS was most clearly defined in the prospective clinical trial from the Canada RCC consortium study (22). Eligibility criteria included a T1aN0M0 renal mass on imaging, and the patient to have been deemed by their responsible physician to be unfit for surgery due to advanced age, comorbidity, or refusal of other treatment. Patients were ineligible if they had an estimated life expectancy of less than 2 years, had been diagnosed with a SRM more than 12 months before or were on concurrent systemic therapy for other malignancies. Each participant was also asked to undergo RMB, resulting in the study with the highest proportion of AS patients who have had RMB, although this was still only 56%.
Table 4

AS patient characteristics for selection for entry into AS

StudySelection processMean age (yrs)Mean size of tumour (cm)CCI gradeBaseline kidney functionHistologyComment on patient selection
All patientsAS patientsAll patientsAS patientsAll patientsAS patientsAll patientsAS patientsAll patientsAS patients
University of Michigan (15)Retrospective analysis of prospectively entered SRM database60632.92.3CCI ≥2 48%CCI ≥2 45%eGFR ≤60 mL/min 22%eGFR ≤60 mL/min 21%37% had RMB in treatment group41% had RMBThe combination of tumour size <3 cm, performance status ≥2 and endophytic lesion were most predictive of AS
Fox Chase Cancer Center (16)Retrospective analysis of prospectively entered kidney tumour database637132.6CCI ≥3 27%CCI ≥3 55%CKD stage ≥3 22%CKD stage ≥3 37%n/rn/rCharacteristics associated with use of AS included CCI 1-2, CCI ≥3, solitary kidney, bilateral disease
NCDB (17)Retrospective sample60.170.62.62.6CCI ≥3 3.4%CCI ≥3 5.7%n/rn/rn/rn/rIncreasing age associated with more likely to be managed with ablation or AS
Cleveland Clinic (18)Retrospective analysis of prospectively entered kidney tumour database79*81*3.3*2.3*CCI ≥2 42%CCI ≥2 65%CKD stage ≥3 45%CKD stage ≥3 54%RCC 39%; Benign 21%; Other cancer 20%; Unknown 20%RCC 1.9%; Benign 3.8%; Unknown 94%Patients on AS were older and had greater comorbidity
University of Toronto (19)Prospective AS cohortn/a74n/a2.3*n/an/rn/an/rn/a7/82 had RMB; 2/7 RCC; 5/7 inadequate samplesEligibility criteria: renal mass ≤7 cm, not surgical candidates due to advanced age, significant comorbidities or patient refusal
DISSRM, 2015† (20)Prospective registry62*71*2.5*1.9*CCI 1-337%CCI 1-351%CKD 7.3%CKD 9.9%3.6% had RMB in intervention group of which: oncocytoma 20%; RCC 70%; Non diagnostic 10%9.4% had RMB of which: Oncocytoma 43%; RCC 29%; Non-diagnostic 24%AS patients were older, had worse ECOG scores, total comorbidities and cardiovascular comorbidities, with tumours more likely to be multiple, smaller or bilateral
Canada (22)Prospective non-comparative clinical trial of ASn/a73n/a2.1n/an/rn/an/rn/rAll trial patients asked to undergo RMBEligibility criteria: T1a renal mass on imaging, deemed by physician to be unfit for surgery due to advanced age, comorbidity or refusal of other treatment
Oxford, 2012† (23)Retrospective analysis of local cancer database62.171.92.62.3n/rn/rn/rn/rn/r7/71 had RMB of which: 2/7 RCC; 2/7Oncocytoma; 3/7 Non-diagnosticAS patients were significantly older. No significant difference in tumour size between AS and treatment groups (RN and PN)
Haifa (25)Retrospective analysis of AS cohortn/a68n/a1.9n/aMean CCI =4.5n/an/rn/an/rInclusion criteria for AS: risk factors for end stage renal disease, multiple major medical comorbidities, patient preference
University of Michigan, 2016 (26)Retrospective analysis of AS cohortn/a66n/a2.0n/aECOG 0 60%, ECOG 1 21%, ECOG 2 14%n/aeGFR m/min Mean74.6n/a51/118 had RMB of which: Benign 37%; Malignant 35%; Non-diagnostic 28%No specific inclusion criteria for AS enrolment mentioned
Pusan National University (27)Prospective AS cohortn/a64n/a1.8n/aCCI ≥3 19%n/an/rn/a32%No specific inclusion criteria for AS enrolment mentioned
Tayside (28)Prospective AS cohortn/a69.8n/a2.2n/aMedian number of comorbidities =2n/aeGFR ≤60ml/min35%n/an/rNo specific criteria for management with AS mentioned
MD Anderson (30)Prospective AS cohortn/a68.5n/a1.74n/aMean CCI =5.8n/aMean eGFR mL/min =72.4n/a45% had RMB of which: RCC 50%; Benign 36%; Non-diagnostic 10%AS was recommended for elderly patients with significant comorbidities, for those undergoing active non-RCC-related cancer treatment, or for patients refusing surgery

AS, active surveillance; CCI, Charlson comorbidity index; CKD, chronic kidney disease; PI, primary intervention; PN, partial nephrectomy; RN, radical nephrectomy; SRM, small renal mass. *median value instead of mean; †comparator group is patient receiving primary intervention rather than all patients.

AS, active surveillance; CCI, Charlson comorbidity index; CKD, chronic kidney disease; PI, primary intervention; PN, partial nephrectomy; RN, radical nephrectomy; SRM, small renal mass. *median value instead of mean; †comparator group is patient receiving primary intervention rather than all patients. The University of Toronto study (19) was a prospectively accrued cohort of AS patients which also had predefined selection criteria. The inclusion criteria for enrolment on this AS study was a renal mass ≤7 cm and that patients were deemed not to be surgical candidates because of advanced age, significant comorbidities, or patient refusal. RMB was not a requirement for inclusion and only 8.5% of patients had RMB. The MD Anderson study (30) was a prospective AS cohort which did not have strict eligibility criteria but stated that AS was recommended for elderly patients with significant comorbidities, or undergoing non-RCC related active cancer treatment, or for patients refusing surgery. Although the study from Haifa (25) was a retrospective analysis of AS patients, the institution had existing criteria for patient selection for AS which was: contrast enhancing renal mass of 4 cm or less, with risk factors for end-stage renal disease, multiple major comorbidities, and patient preference. The other 3 studies of prospective AS cohorts [DISSRM (20), Pusan National University (27), Tayside (28)] were not as prescriptive in their inclusion criteria. Patients were eligible based on size of renal mass, and the availability of cross-sectional imaging. The DISSRM registry specified a solid enhancing renal mass ≤4 cm, whereas the Tayside cohort included both solid and cystic SRM ≤4 cm. The DISSRM registry (20) also specified exclusion criteria of patients with a personal history of RCC, familial RCC syndrome or suspicion of second malignancy metastatic to the kidney. In summary, these selection criteria appear to show an emphasis on patient characteristics and ineligibility for surgery rather than the risk profile of the tumour.

Clinical characteristics of patients on AS

Six studies included statistical analysis of comparison of the baseline characteristics between the AS group and either all SRM patients or a primary intervention (PI) group. Five of these studies were retrospective analyses of datasets of SRM patients [University of Michigan 2012 (15), Fox Chase Cancer Center (16), NCDB (17), Cleveland Clinic (18), Oxford (23)] and one study, the DISSRM registry (20), used prospective enrolment. The patients selected for AS appear to be more likely to have a greater number of comorbidities and a decreased performance status. However, the significance of older age, renal failure and smaller tumour size in the AS groups varied across the studies. The Fox Chase Cancer Center study (16) examined the clinical characteristics of cT1 renal masses for selection of treatment. Out of a total of 969 patients, 25.7% were managed with AS and these patients were found to be more likely to have Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) score of 1 to 2 (OR =2.2) or CCI ≥3 (OR =6.9), have a solitary kidney (OR =7.1) and bilateral disease (OR =7.6). Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) stage V disease, history of previous malignancy, increasing tumour size, and high nephrometry score complexity were less likely to undergo expectant management with RN, PN or ablation. Although the median age of those in the AS group was the highest at 71 years compared to 63 years in the RN group and 59 years in the PN group, there was no statistically significant increased odds of older age being selected for AS compared to RN (OR =1.02). The University of Michigan study (15) found the differences between the AS group and treatment group were: ECOG performance status, tumour size and whether the lesion was more than 50% exophytic. Patients with an ECOG score <2 were more likely to undergo treatment, and those with an ECOG score ≥2 were more likely to undergo AS. There was no difference between the AS and treatment groups in clinical) characteristics of age, baseline renal function, CCI score, body mass index (BMI), or presence of a solitary kidney. A smaller tumour favoured AS, as did an entirely endophytic lesion on imaging. The DISSRM prospective registry (20) showed a marked difference in characteristics of patient age, tumour size and comorbidities between patients on AS and those who had PI. The AS patients were older, had worse performance status, increased total comorbidities and cardiovascular comorbidities, and more likely to have multiple, smaller or bilateral tumours compared to patients who initially chose PI. There was no significant different between AS and PI groups for BMI, prior surgery, or tumour complexity. Fewer patients (3.6%) in the PI group had RMB compared to the AS group (9.4%). In summary, the selection process or selection criteria for entry into AS showed similarities between studies. There were no studies that described objective measures for patient characteristics such as an age or CCI threshold. The description of the selection criteria recommendations suggests much is left to the discretion of the clinical team to decide on their judgement of ‘advanced age’ or ‘significant comorbidities’ or to be unsuitable for surgery. No studies had RMB as a prerequisite to being managed with AS. Some of the more technical considerations such as patient BMI and previous surgery have not been shown to be significant, whereas patient comorbidity and life expectancy, using CCI as a prognostic indicator, do appear to have been a significant consideration in decision-making between the patient and the clinician for selection into AS.

Surveillance strategy and indications for delayed intervention

provides an overview of surveillance strategies used or predefined by the ten AS patient cohorts with follow-up included in this review. Although the SEER study (29) had follow-up for survival analysis, no information was available on surveillance strategy as this was a population study and therefore the SEER study is not included in . Six studies of prospective AS cohorts [University of Toronto (19), DISSRM (20), Canada (22), Haifa (25), Pusan National University (27), MD Anderson (30)] had a predefined study protocol or institutional protocol for AS surveillance. The Cleveland Clinic (18) study was retrospective and stated imaging was conducted 6-monthly, and the Oxford study had no institutional AS protocol, stating that imaging was usually every 3–6 months on surveillance. The Tayside study (28) also had no prospectively established protocol, with decisions made for SRM patients at multidisciplinary meetings (MDT), resulting in most patients receiving computed tomography (CT) surveillance. *value is median. AS, active surveillance; CT, computed tomography; DI, delayed intervention; GR, growth rate; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PN, partial nephrectomy; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; RN, radical nephrectomy; SRM, small renal mass; US, ultrasound.

Modality and frequency of imaging surveillance

All ten AS patient cohorts included imaging surveillance with clinical visits as part of the surveillance strategy, with general agreement between studies on the modality and frequency of imaging. After baseline cross-axial imaging, all studies (except for the Cleveland Clinic) described imaging with either CT, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or ultrasound scan (USS). The Haifa study (25) recommends alternating cross-sectional imaging with USS in the second year. Where USS is one of the modalities, care is taken to recommend cross-sectional imaging if the USS showed growth, change in the qualitative appearance of the tumour or provided poor quality images in the Tayside (28) and DISSRM studies (20). Imaging frequency was broadly similar between studies, with a frequency of 3 to 6-monthly in the first 1 to 2 years, lengthening to 6-monthly or annually thereafter.

Indications for delayed intervention

Six studies had set criteria for progression or indications for intervention, of which five studies [DISSRM (20), Canada (22), Haifa (25), Pusan National University (27), MD Anderson (30)] had pre-defined criteria, and one study [University of Michigan (15)] introduced progression criteria during the period of the study. The Oxford (23) and Tayside (28) studies had recommendations for offering treatment rather than predefined criteria. The Cleveland Clinic (18) and University of Toronto (19) studies did not provide definitions of progression or indications for intervention. The most commonly stated criteria for intervention, used in 4 studies [DISSRM, University of Michigan (15), Pusan National University (27), MD Anderson (30)], were growth of more than 0.5 cm/year or tumour size reaching >4 cm. Two studies [Oxford (23), Haifa (25)] included growth rate described as ‘rapid’ and ‘high’ rather than a defined rate. The Tayside study (28) did not include growth rate as a criterion. The Canada trial (22) used doubling of SRM volume in 12 months or less rather than a measure of maximal axial diameter for growth rate. Five studies [DISSRM (20), Haifa (25), Pusan National University (27), Tayside (28), MD Anderson (30)] include patient or surgeon choice as an indication, with only the Canada trial (22) not specifying this as a criteria. Although the Oxford study does not mention patient choice as an indication for treatment, 4/14 patients who received DI were due to patient choice.

Rate of delayed Intervention

Nine studies [University of Toronto (19), DISSRM (20,21), Canada (22), Oxford (23), Haifa (25), University of Michigan (15), Tayside (28), Pusan National University (27), MD Anderson (30)] reported the rate of delayed intervention (DI) which varied between 5% to 24% and this is likely to be due to a variety of reasons The lowest DI rate of 5% in the Canada RCC Consortium study (22) may be due to the fact this was a trial with predefined criteria for intervention, and therefore patient preference was less likely to initiate DI. However, the true DI rate of the Canada study is higher, due to 16 patients who withdrew from the study also going onto to have treatment for their SRM. In total 33 out of the original 178 patients enrolled in the study withdrew due to patient or clinician preference. The cases of DI in the Haifa (25) and Pusan National University (27) studies were also all due to progression of the SRM. Five other studies [University of Toronto (19), DISSRM (20), Oxford (23), University of Michigan 2016 (15), MD Anderson (30)] stated patient preference as a reason for DI, with proportions of DI due to patient preference varying from 11% to 71%. The MD Anderson study (30) also found that patient choice was the most common reason for DI within the first two years of AS, whereas increasing size was the most common reason after 2 years of AS. Increase in size or meeting progression criteria as the reason for DI varied from 29% to 100% of DI cases. All studies in had a similar median follow up time of around 2–3 years, except for the Oxford study which had updated data at 9.4 years median follow up and the MD Anderson study which had a slightly longer median follow-up period of 4.8 years. There appears to be no relationship between length of follow-up and DI rate, to suggest that a longer follow up period will result in increasing numbers of patients receiving treatment. No firm conclusions can be drawn on the reasons behind the variation in DI rates across the studies but is likely to be due to the different selection criteria, time period covered by the study, surveillance strategies and criteria set for intervention as well as unmeasured factors of the regional differences in practice and preferences of the physicians.

Discussion

There have been several studies investigating the outcomes of AS for low-risk kidney cancer and multiple narrative (5,47-50) and systematic reviews (51,52) conducted on the clinical characteristics of patients with SRM and on AS, the natural history of SRM and the outcomes of AS. This review of contemporary practice of AS in the last 2 decades has found that most of the evidence regarding worldwide practice of AS is from North American cohorts and that large similarities can be found between studies in terms of patient selection and surveillance strategy for AS management. However, the practice of AS, as described in the studies included in this review, appears to rest on a handful of general principles, with plenty of room for interpretation left to the clinicians and also a strong emphasis on patient preference. More nuanced and evidence-based strategies for patient selection and surveillance have not been employed. Important information on the natural history of the SRM, the method of diagnosis and risk stratification of the SRM and the optimal surveillance strategy is still lacking to be able to aid informed decision making for choosing AS. The pertinent questions related to AS from diagnosis to decision for delayed intervention is discussed below.

Patient and tumour selection for active surveillance

Competing risk of mortality from other causes

Patient factors are increasingly relevant to consider when choosing a management option for SRM as the age group with the largest rate of increase of diagnosis of kidney cancer is 70–90 years (4). Significant patient factors identified from the studies in this review include age, comorbidities including concurrent other cancers, risk of morbidity and mortality from surgical intervention, and risk of worsening pre-existing renal failure or cardiovascular disease. Analysis of older patients (over 75 years) in population-based studies comparing the oncological outcomes of surgery (either PN or RN or ablation) to non-surgical management (either AS or watchful waiting), showed no significant benefit in cancer-specific mortality for surgical treatment (37). In the elderly and those with significant comorbidities, there is the concept of ‘competing risk’ of other causes of mortality which are higher than the risk of renal cell cancer-specific mortality from the SRM (1,18,50,53). A review of AS for SRM specifically in the elderly (aged ≥70 years), showed an overall mortality of 15–51% across 17 retrospective studies, during up to 91 months of follow up on AS, with minimal (0–5%) cancer-specific mortality or progression to metastases, regardless of type of primary intervention or on AS (50). Using the SEER database, modelling for mortality risk reveals that, in a 75 year old Caucasian male with a 4 cm renal tumour, the risk of mortality would be 5% from renal cancer, 4.5% from other cancer, and 14% from a non-cancer related cause (38).

Age as a patient factor

The guidelines and trends in management of SRM suggest that patient age is a major factor in the likelihood of being managed with AS. The DISSRM registry showed that 40% of patients initially chose AS, with the AS group being significantly older than the primary intervention group (median age 71 vs. 62 years old) (20). Although no age thresholds are mentioned in the international guidelines, the modelling suggests those over 70–75 years receive less oncological benefit from primary intervention for SRM due to competing risks for mortality (37,38,50,53). However, of the older patients managed with SRM, the proportion who were managed with AS is in the minority for most age groups, with approximately 10% of those aged 70–79 years on AS, rising to approximately 30% in 80–89 year, and AS not chosen in the majority (>70%) until the 90+ age group (17). The mean age of AS patients for the studies in this review ranged from 63 to 81 years, with the average across studies of 70 years (). This is compared with the age range for all patients with SRM or those who had PI which was 60 to 79 years, with an average age across studies of 64 years. Three studies (17,20,21,23), found that patients selected for AS were significantly older than those receiving PI, whereas age was not associated with use of AS in three other studies (15,16,18). Of the studies with predefined recommendations for AS selection, only one [Haifa (25)] does not mention age as a factor.

Risk of primary operative management

Although age is the strongest predictor of risk of death from non-cancer related causes, within the context of risk from operative management, it is not clear whether elderly patients have worse outcomes from nephrectomy than younger patients. There is evidence that PN has a higher rate of postoperative complications than RN (54) which may increase the risk of surgery for elderly patients. But there is also evidence to suggest that older patients (more than 70 years vs. those under 70 years) have no significantly increased complication rate after robotic PN (55), and that older patients may still benefit from PN rather than RN despite a higher reported complication rate overall for PN (56). However, this evidence is from a select, much smaller population of elderly patients undergoing PN compared to the younger cohort. Age alone should not preclude a patient from the option of PN for a SRM but given the low-risk overall of cancer-specific mortality from SRM for these patients, surgery may not be of overall benefit to the patient. Two studies (19,22) in this review included ‘unfit for surgery’ as a selection criteria for AS, of which, the criteria in one of these studies (22) states ‘advanced age’ as a reason a patient may not be a surgical candidate. It could be argued that patients who, at baseline, are not surgical candidates should be placed on ‘watchful waiting’ which is not the same management as AS. Watchful waiting can be used for patients who are not suitable for any active treatment, with no need for imaging surveillance, and intervention would be triggered by clinical symptoms with the aim of palliation. Active surveillance is a deferred treatment option, where delayed intervention is triggered by progression evident on surveillance, with a curative aim. It is therefore not clear whether some of the patients in these AS cohorts were, in reality, on watchful waiting rather than AS, and brings into question the value of having ‘unfit’ for surgery as a criterion for AS. This may also depend on the use of thermal ablation as a non-surgical option for DI, which may widen the selection criteria for management with AS.

Renal function

Aside from elderly patients, those with, or at risk of, progression to end stage renal failure after nephrectomy should receive special consideration when balancing risk of immediate versus delayed intervention. Only one study [Haifa (25)] in this review specifically mentioned risk factors for end-stage renal disease as an inclusion criteria for AS. No studies in that compared baseline renal function between AS and PI groups reported a statistically significant difference. Radical or partial nephrectomy does reduce kidney function but usually not to a significant extent to lead to end stage renal failure, due to the ability of the kidney to hypertrophy and compensate for nephron loss (57,58). Recovery of renal function to baseline has been shown in 45% of patients two years after radical nephrectomy (59). Even for patients who go on to have CKD after surgery, the outcomes are better than for those with medically induced CKD, where there are often persistent underlying causes such as hypertension and diabetes (57). Therefore, the consideration of risk in these patients should not primarily be focused on the loss of nephrons versus the risk of cancer. For those patients with SRM and pre-existing late-stage CKD, the competing mortality risk of cardiovascular disease, which is the main driver of mortality in late stage CKD, is the more significant factor and must be balanced against any potential oncological benefit. As the estimated glomerular filtration rate decreases to <30 mL/min/1.73 m2, death due to cardiovascular disease will outpace death due to malignancy by a factor of 2:1 (57).

Clinician factors

Reasons behind patient and clinician choice of AS versus primary intervention may also include clinician factors. This is important to understand how clinicians make decisions on patient selection for AS given that the current guidelines and evidence for practice of AS allows for clinicians to use their own interpretation of whether patients meet the inclusion criteria for comorbidity and suitability for surgery. A survey of urologists shows that 34% would choose PN or RN for a patient with SRM in their 80s, decreasing to 16% if the patient also had significant comorbidities (60). Of those urologists who chose PN or RN for these cases, they themselves were more likely to be >65 years, practicing in a non-academic setting, and without oncology fellowship training, and stated that they did not consider patient age one of the 3 most important considerations in their decision making process (60). These trends for uptake of AS for SRM may change with the more recent 2017 AUA guidelines and EAU guidelines making specific mention of recommendations for AS (1,8).

Role of renal mass biopsy

The use of renal mass biopsy is low across the studies included in this review and suggests, in practice, RMB is not a routine diagnostic procedure before consideration of AS. shows the rate of RMB for patients with SRM varies from 2.3% to 56%. Even for patients enrolled in a clinical trial for AS [Canada RCC Consortium (22)] where every participant was offered RMB, only 56% had RMB. The role of RMB may be particularly useful for a select group of patients considering AS and is mentioned in several of the guidelines. The low uptake of RMB may also be related to traditional concerns regarding its safety, validity, non-diagnostic rate and risk of seeding, issues which have largely been shown to be not as significant as previously thought in a 2016 systematic review and meta-analysis (61). This showed across 57 studies and 5,228 patients who had RMB for renal tumours (of which 7 studies included SRM only), there was a median diagnostic rate of 92%, with sensitivity of 99% and specificity of 99% for renal core biopsies. There was an overall complication rate of 8.1% of which, only three cases had a complication of Clavien-Dindo grade ≥2 (61). Of the studies included in , non-diagnostic rates for RMB in these SRM cohorts are reported to be between 19–33%, with benign findings in 12–40% of cases, and malignancy found in 28–80% of cases (20,22,31,52). Given that growth rate has been shown to be similar between benign and malignant lesions, and imaging is not reliable in distinguishing between pathologically aggressive and low-risk tumours, a finding of benign histology is likely to avoid overtreatment of SRM on AS and perhaps reduce the intensity of follow-up on AS (62). Even for a biopsy finding of oncocytoma, observation has been shown to be safe after mid-term follow up as a significant number of oncocytomas will show zero or minimal growth (63). For those with a finding of malignant histology on RMB, given the slow growth rate, low metastatic potential, and competing risks for mortality in certain patients, AS is still a safe choice and can reduce overtreatment in malignant SRM. In a prospective study of SRM with biopsy proven RCC on AS, the majority showed growth on AS (59%) but 27% showed a decrease in the size and the rest remained unchanged in size (22). RMB may also reveal malignant tumours with more favourable histology (such as low grade clear cell RCC, type 1 papillary and chromophobe types) versus more aggressive histology with high grade RCC, which may influence the decision for DI on AS (64). However, there has been found to only be a fair to good level of agreement between biopsy and surgical pathology for tumour subtype (κ =0.68) and Fuhrman grade (κ =0.34) (61). Using RMB to identify high-grade or sarcomatoid RCC with a worse prognosis before AS is not reliable and may still not impact overall survival (20). Therefore, it is not clear whether the additional information gained from initial RMB benefits the management of AS patients in terms of avoiding overtreatment and triggering appropriate DI (65). In a prospective database of 118 patients, 51 patients had RMB, of which 35% were malignant, 37% benign and 28% non-diagnostic (26). For those who went onto to have DI, compared to those on AS who did not proceed to intervention, the rate of initial RMB was the same, as was the proportion of RMB which were malignant (26). The risk for DI was shown to be mainly influenced by growth rate and initial size of tumour rather than the results of initial renal biopsy (26). This mirrors the finding of reasons for delayed intervention from two AS studies included in this review and other studies, with patient and clinician choice being the major decider rather than progression on imaging (4,20,30,31). It may be that RMB is of greater utility after a period of AS if the tumour is showing significant growth. If the RMB reveals a benign or good prognosis malignant tumour this may sway the decision to continue AS rather than proceed to delayed intervention, especially in those patients with a high, rather than intermediate, risk of competing risk for mortality (20,65). Initial RMB before AS has also been shown to be associated with greater psychological distress in the over 70 age group if the result of RMB shows malignant histology, which may be counterproductive to effective AS management given the overall low metastatic risk of malignant SRM (66).

Surveillance strategy and indications for delayed intervention

Evidence for the growth rate of the SRM

Surveillance strategy currently relies on measuring the growth kinetics of the SRM but this has been shown to be an unreliable prognosticator of metastatic potential. The evidence from retrospective and prospective data suggests that SRM show growth of approximately 0.10 to 0.30 cm per year, with 10–20% showing a zero growth rate (4,20,22,31,52,67,68). Unhelpfully, the growth rate between malignant vs. benign SRM does not seem to differ, and initial tumour size is also not predictive of growth rate (4,68). The rate of metastases of SRM on AS has been recorded to be between 0.4–2% (4,20). However, the proportion of SRM on AS having had a renal mass biopsy (RMB) is variable, and therefore there exists contamination of the active surveillance data with benign lesions. Where biopsy has been performed or subsequent pathology is available from delayed intervention there is still a significant number of benign lesions being treated, with 41–88% of treated SRM having been found to be malignant, 12–18% benign, and 19–33% were non-diagnostic (4,20,22,31,52).

Indications for delayed intervention

Few guidelines specify an imaging surveillance protocol, although studies of AS cohorts have shown similarities in their use of surveillance imaging and thresholds for intervention. However, rates of DI seem variable despite similar definitions for progression based on tumour size and growth rate. Even for the patients on AS in the DISSRM registry, with predefined criteria for progression, over half of the patients who underwent delayed intervention had no evidence of clinical progression (31). However, it is worth noting that of the 21 AS patients who crossed over to DI in the DISSRM 2015 study, the rate of RCC on final histology was 67% in the patient preference group (with 2 high grade tumours), and 83% in the group meeting DI criteria (with 1 high grade tumour) (20). This further emphasizes that the current indications for DI could be improved. In the Smaldone et al. (2012) systematic review of retrospective AS cohorts for SRM, 45.4% (129/284) of SRM underwent delayed intervention at a mean of 30.5±21.8 months (4). Of the 85/129 reasons given for delayed intervention, patient preference was given in 57% of cases and tumour growth in 36%. The masses which underwent delayed intervention also had a significantly higher linear growth rate of 0.38 vs. 0.24 cm/year, although initial tumour diameter was similar between continued surveillance and DI groups (4). Of the prospective cohort studies in this systematic review, triggers for DI included tumour size >4 cm, increasing tumour complexity on imaging, symptoms, infiltrative appearance, patient preference, and interval growth of more than 0.5 cm per year (4,48). The finding of a significant proportion of cases of DI being due to patient choice across the studies included in this review should prompt further investigation of how patients are counselled during AS. The potential for psychological distress and anxiety of patients should also be considered for patients on AS and as a factor for why patients may choose to stop AS. Although the DISSRM registry suggested no difference in the mental component score of the SF-12 questionnaire between the AS and PI groups, patients who have ‘illness uncertainty’ have been shown to have worse physical and psychosocial quality of life scores (32). Another study of patients under 70 years on AS found greater psychological distress for AS patients compared to surgery/ablation patients, and a biopsy-proven malignancy was also a risk factor for greater psychological distress on AS (66).

Imaging surveillance protocols

Specific imaging protocols for surveillance of a SRM on AS do not have a strong evidence base. The use of CT vs. MRI vs. US is also a balance of radiation risk versus the ability to accurately measure maximal tumour diameter and characterise enhancement in Hounsfield units. US and MRI may be preferred to reduce radiation dose and in those with poor renal function, but CT is preferential for Hounsfield unit enhancement characterisation (69). Serial measurement of maximal tumour diameter should ideally be done with a consistent imaging modality regardless of which one is chosen. Although tumour volume should give a better indicator of growth, the low inter-observer variability and margin of error shown with measurement of maximal tumour diameter suggests this is still the preferred way to monitor tumour growth (69). Increased use of RMB before and during AS may improve understanding of when best to trigger delayed intervention, as well as imaging biomarkers to indicate tumour progression. Currently, tumour size and growth kinetics are the mainstay of imaging surveillance, but with no standardised approach. This may contribute to a lesser degree of confidence for both the clinician and patient when considering AS for SRM.

The future of AS for low-risk kidney cancer

AS for low-risk kidney cancer has been adopted into international guideline recommendations, and population data from the USA shows large numbers of patients are being managed with AS. However, evidence is still needed on diagnosis and risk stratification of the SRM in order to understand the risk of progression for patients entering AS and the impact of surveillance strategies. Initial tumour size and tumour growth rate have been shown to be unreliable predictors of malignant and aggressive disease. Further evidence on the management of SRM and AS surveillance is needed from prospective trials with standardised protocols for patient selection and follow-up, and standardised reporting of clinical outcomes. Further evidence is awaited from five registered trials are currently collecting data for AS management of SRM, three in North America and two in Europe (47). The European Active Surveillance of Renal Cell Carcinoma (EASE RCC) study (47) is currently open and aims to recruit 400 patients across Europe with SRM with the primary objective to assess the survival of patients who are diagnosed with incidental SRM managed with AS. Crucially, this trial requires histological confirmation with RMB and aims to identify the clinical and pathological factors of growth rate and progression for SRM. The increased use of RMB in AS trials should reduce the number of patients included who do not have histologically proven kidney cancer. Research priorities identified as part of a renal cancer modified Delphi consensus statement for low-risk kidney cancer include: improving the diagnosis and characterisation of incidentally detected SRM; developing an evidence-based active surveillance protocol based on the natural history of the SRM and the impact of different imaging protocols; and developing effective immunohistochemical biomarkers for kidney biopsy samples that can provide better diagnostic and prognostic information (70).

Characterisation of SRM using imaging

In terms of improving diagnosis and characterisation of the SRM, current methods rely on cross-sectional imaging and use of RMB. Renal tumours are difficult to characterise given the high degree of heterogeneity of renal tumour biology. Cross-sectional imaging has utility in distinguishing cystic versus solid RCCs and angiomyolipomas (AML). Cystic RCCs show a more indolent course regardless of size and Bosniak category and, although lipid-poor AMLs may be hard to distinguish from clear cell RCC, the vast majority of sporadic AMLs also demonstrate a negligible growth rate (48). Further discrimination of histological subtype, between clear cell RCC, oncocytoma, papillary and chromophobe RCC using CT and MRI is limited and not reliable enough to impact on clinical decision making (69). Novel imaging methods being investigated include 99mTc-sestamibi single-photon emission CT (SPECT/CT) and prostate-specific membrane antigen-targeted (PSMA) PET/CT to differentiate benign oncocytomas from RCC which may further improve risk stratification of SRM for primary intervention versus AS (48). A study of preoperative imaging with 99mTc-sestamibi SPECT/CT of 50 T1 renal masses showed that SPECT/CT was able to currently identify 5/6 of oncocytomas and 2/2 hybrid oncocytic/chromophobe tumours with a sensitivity of 87.5% and specificity of 95.2% (71).

Tissue biomarkers

As the role of RMB increases for the diagnosis of SRM, development of more reliable and readily available immunohistochemical and molecular tissue biomarkers that may be applied to biopsy samples will help improve the diagnostic, predictive and prognostic utility of RMB (70). The aims of a tissue biomarker would be to aid histological diagnosis, detect markers associated with aggressive disease and be able to diagnose benign tumours (47). In particular, distinguishing between benign and malignant oncocytomas remains a challenge. Chromophobe RCC is histologically and morphologically similar to benign renal oncocytomas, and molecular biomarkers which can be applied to RMB are being developed to aid diagnosis. It has been found that oncocytomas have more extensive overall abnormal DNA methylation compared to chromophobe RCC. Using DNA methylation patterns, a molecular biomarker based on a signature of differentially methylated cystosine-phosphate-guanine sites (CpGs) has been developed which can distinguish oncocytoma from chromophobe RCC with 85% to 96% accuracy (46,72). Another novel method is ‘optical biopsy’ which uses optical coherence tomography via a needle probe to image a renal tumour, allowing the analysis of tissue specific optical properties. Cancer tissue has different light scattering properties to normal tissue and different renal cancer subtypes have been shown to have different optical properties with this technique (71).

Conclusion

Evidence for the safety and strategy of AS has grown with increasing data from retrospective, and more recently, long term data from large prospective AS cohorts. The 10-year update from the DISSRM registry includes 437 AS patients, the largest prospective AS cohort to date. Further data is awaited from ongoing prospective trials of AS to gain better understanding of the natural history of AS, the survival of AS patients, the clinical and pathological factors affecting growth and progression of AS and the optimal AS surveillance strategy. This review shows that AS is being applied in a variety of centres worldwide and that key areas of patient selection criteria and surveillance strategy have large similarities. However, the rate of renal mass biopsy and of delayed intervention varies significantly between studies, suggesting the process of diagnosing malignant SRM and decision making whilst on AS are varying in practice. Increased confidence with diagnosis and management of SRM on AS will depend on answering the key research questions of diagnosing the high risk malignant SRM and understanding the factors for progression. The article’s supplementary files as
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Authors:  Patrick O Richard; Micheal A S Jewett; Antonio Finelli
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2016-08-06       Impact factor: 20.096

6.  Renal Mass and Localized Renal Cancer: AUA Guideline.

Authors:  Steven Campbell; Robert G Uzzo; Mohamad E Allaf; Eric B Bass; Jeffrey A Cadeddu; Anthony Chang; Peter E Clark; Brian J Davis; Ithaar H Derweesh; Leo Giambarresi; Debra A Gervais; Susie L Hu; Brian R Lane; Bradley C Leibovich; Philip M Pierorazio
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2017-05-04       Impact factor: 7.450

7.  Long-Term Renal Function Recovery following Radical Nephrectomy for Kidney Cancer: Results from a Multicenter Confirmatory Study.

Authors:  Emily C Zabor; Helena Furberg; Byron Lee; Steven Campbell; Brian R Lane; R Houston Thompson; Elvis Caraballo Antonio; Sabrina L Noyes; Harras Zaid; Edgar A Jaimes; Paul Russo
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2017-10-21       Impact factor: 7.450

8.  Evolving Trends for Selected Treatments of T1a Renal Cell Carcinoma.

Authors:  Johnathan Doolittle; Joshua Piotrowski; Keegan Zuk; Kenneth Jacobsohn; Peter Langenstroer; William See; Scott Johnson
Journal:  Urology       Date:  2019-07-04       Impact factor: 2.649

Review 9.  Partial Nephrectomy Versus Radical Nephrectomy for Clinical T1b and T2 Renal Tumors: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Comparative Studies.

Authors:  Maria Carmen Mir; Ithaar Derweesh; Francesco Porpiglia; Homayoun Zargar; Alexandre Mottrie; Riccardo Autorino
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2016-09-07       Impact factor: 20.096

Review 10.  Management of the small renal mass.

Authors:  Nima Almassi; Bradley C Gill; Brian Rini; Khaled Fareed
Journal:  Transl Androl Urol       Date:  2017-10
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