| Literature DB >> 34295761 |
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
Summary of recommendations from 7 worldwide regional urological organisations with published guidelines
| International body | Guideline year | Definition | Recommendations for role of renal mass biopsy | Recommendations regarding management/AS | Protocol for follow-up for AS patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| European Association of Urology ( | 2020 | cT1a | Before ablation treatment. In select patients who are considering AS | Offer 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 RCC | Not mentioned |
| American Urological Association ( | 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 findings | AS 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 treatment | Repeat 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 ( | 2019 | <4 cm solid tumour | Recommended for select patients with small masses for AS | AS is an option in elderly patients with significant comorbidities or those with short life expectancy. Otherwise PN is recommended for T1 <7 cm tumours | Not mentioned |
| Canadian Urological Association (Kidney Cancer Research Network of Canada) ( | 2015 | cT1a ‘<4cm’ | Perform if changes management. Perform before, or at the time of, ablation for SRM. Is not yet | Active surveillance with radiographic follow up should be primary consideration in elderly and infirm patients at high risk of intervention and limited life expectancy | CT 3-monthly in year 1, 6-montly in year 2–3, yearly thereafter |
| Can use ultrasound +/- contrast enhancement | |||||
| Japanese Urological Association ( | 2011, 2007 | cT1a | Not mentioned | Partial nephrectomy or nephrectomy | N/A |
| Ablation or cryotherapy is an option | |||||
| Latin American Renal Cancer group ( | 2019 | ‘small renal mass’ not otherwise defined | Recommend biopsy when patients are candidates for AS | PN 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 histology | CT or MRI or US every 3–6 months for |
| Sociedad Argentina de Urología ( | 2010 | Renal mass less than 2 cm | For lesions suspected to be non-malignant | Option of observation or consideration of surgery, preferably partial nephrectomy | Not mentioned |
| Saudi Urology Association ( | 2015 | cT1a | RMB strongly recommended before non-surgical options e.g., ablation and AS | Recommended treatment is surgery preferably partial nephrectomy. Active surveillance and ablation not recommended unless significant comorbidities that interdict surgery | Not mentioned |
AS, active surveillance; CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PN, partial nephrectomy; RMB, renal mass biopsy; SRM, small renal mass; US, ultrasound.
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
| Study | Country | Study type | Study period | Definition of SRM | Patient no. with SRM | Patient no. on AS (%) | % with RMB | Follow up (median) | % of AS patient with progression* | % of AS patients who had delayed intervention | Outcomes on AS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies with no follow up | |||||||||||
| University of Michigan, 2012 ( | USA | Retrospective analysis of prospectively entered SRM database | 2009–2010 | cT1 | 204 | 73/204 | 41% (30/73) | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, 2013 ( | USA | Retrospective analysis of prospectively entered kidney tumour database | 2005–2011 | cT1 | 969 | 266/969 | n/r | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| National Cancer Database (NCDB), 2019 ( | USA | Retrospective sample | 2004–2015 | cT1a or pT1a | 75,691 | 6,228/75,691 (8%) | n/r | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Studies with follow up | |||||||||||
| Cleveland Clinic, 2010 ( | USA | Retrospective analysis of prospectively entered kidney tumour database | 2000–2006 | cT1 | 537 | 105/537 | 2.3% (13/537) | 3.9 | n/r | n/r | Cancer-specific mortality not significantly associated with management type (RN vs. PN |
| University of Toronto, | Canada (3 centres) | Prospective AS cohort | 2001–2009 | cT1 | n/a | 82 | 8.5% | 3 years | n/a | 15% (12/82) | 1/82 developed metastases after 18 months of follow-up; 8.6% (7/82) died from other causes |
| DISSRM, 2015, ( | USA (3 centres) | Prospective SRM registry | 2009–2014 | cT1a | 497 | 223/497 (45%) | 6.4% (32/497) | 2.1 years | 16% (36/223) | 9% (21/223) | AS was not predictive of OS or CSS at 5 years |
| DISSRM, 2020† ( | USA | Prospective SRM registry | 2009–2019 | cT1a | 785 | 437/785 (56%) | n/r | 3.3 years | 25% (110/437) | 15% (67/437) | At 10 years: no difference in CSS between PI and AS groups, however OS was higher in PI (83%) |
| Canada (Renal Cell Carcinoma Consortium), 2011 ( | Canada (8 centres) | Prospective non-comparative clinical trial of AS | 2004–2009 | cT1a | n/a | 178 | 56% (99/178)—all patients asked to undergo RMB | 2.3 years | 15% (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, ( | UK | Retrospective analysis of local cancer database | 2005–2010 | cT1a solid or Bosniak IV | 208 | 76/208 (37%) | 7.5% | 9.4 years | 12% | 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 ( | Israel | Retrospective analysis of AS cohort | 2003–2013 | cT1a | n/a | 70 | 4% (3/70) | 2.8 years | 59% | 10% (7/70) | No cases of metastases |
| University of Michigan, | USA | Retrospective analysis of AS cohort | 2009–2011 | cT1a | n/a | 118 | 43% (51/118) | 2.5 years | 6.7% (8/118) | 24% (28/118) | 1 case (0.8%) of metastases; 8 deaths not related to SRM |
| Pusan National University, 2017 ( | South Korea | Prospective AS cohort | 2010–2016 | SRM <3 cm | n/a | 37 | 32% (12/37) (mainly whilst on surveillance for rapid growth rate) | 2.3 years | 16% (6/37) | 8% (3/37) | No cases of metastases or cancer specific death |
| Tayside (Urological Cancers Network), 2017 ( | UK | Retrospective AS cohort | 2007–2014 | SRM | n/a | 226 (Solid =158, Cystic =68) | 15.6% | 1.8 years | 46% | 19% (43/226) | 4.4% (7/158) metastasized |
| SEER, 2018 ( | USA | Retrospective SRM cohort | 2002–2011 | cT1a | 10218 | 1978/10218 (19.4%) | n/r | n/r | n/r | n/r | CSS 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 ( | USA | Prospective AS cohort | 2005–2016 | SRM ≤4 cm | n/a | 272 | 45% (123/272) | 4.8 years | n/r | 24% (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.
Surveillance strategy and outcomes of delayed intervention. Studies without follow up not shown
| Study | Imaging modality used | Frequency of imaging | Definition of progression | Indications for intervention | Mean growth rate of SRM on AS (cm/year) | % of SRM on AS showing no growth/ | Intervention rate | Median time to | Reasons for intervention | Final histology after DI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cleveland Clinic ( | Not specified | 6-monthly | n/r | n/r | n/r | n/r | n/r | n/r | n/r | n/r |
| University of Toronto ( | CT/MRI/US according to patient body habitus and physician preference | 6-monthly | n/r | No predefined criteria for | 0.25 | 15% | 14.6% (12/82) | 27 months | 25% (3/12) due to improvement in comorbidities; Patient choice 50% (6/12); Rapid growth 50% (6/12) - mean of 1.07 cm/yr | All found to have RCC |
| DISSRM, 2015 ( | US preferred. Axial imaging if any discrepancy in tumour size or growth rate, or US poor quality or change in tumour appearance | Initially 4–6-monthly for 2 years, then every 6–12 months | n/r | Growth rate >0.5 cm/yr or Size >4 cm or Patient choice at any time | 0.11* | 10% | 9.4% (21/223) | n/r | Patient preference | 67% RCC in patient preference group |
| 83% RCC in DI due to progression group | ||||||||||
| Canada ( | CT/MRI/US | Initially at 3 and 6 months, then 6-monthly for 3 years, then annually | SRM growth ≥4 cm, or doubling of SRM | Same as progression criteria | 0.13 | 36% | 5% (9/178) (In addition, 16 withdrawn patients also had DI) | n/r | All due to progression | All had RCC who had PN or RN for DI (All 16 withdrawn patients who had DI also had RCC on final histology) |
| Oxford, 2012 ( | CT / MRI / US | No prospectively established AS protocol | n/r | Recommended to have treatment if size >4 cm or had rapid tumour growth rates | 0.21 | 53% | 19.7% (14/71) | 29 months | Increase in size 64% (9/14); Patient choice 29% (4/14); Change in diagnosis 7% (1/14) | n/r |
| Haifa ( | CT/MRI in the first year. Alternating CT or MRI with US in second year | 6-monthly | n/r | High growth rate or size >4 cm or patient or doctor preference | 0.17 | 31% | 10% (7/70) | 25.9 months | Not specified | RCC 5/7, Oncocytoma 2/7 |
| University of Michigan, 2016 ( | Cross-sectional imaging for first 2 years. CT/MRI/US thereafter Modality at discretion of urologist | Institutional protocol for AS: every 5–6 months for 2 years | n/r | No defined criteria for delayed intervention initially. Subsequent criteria to include growth, rate >0.5 cm/year, size >4cm | 0.20 | 36% | 24% (28/118) | 24 months | Patient preference | Not detailed |
| Pusan National University ( | Abdominal CT or US and chest CT | 6-monthly intervalsThen if no change in size, annual follow up | Predefined criteria: Growth rate >0.5 cm/yr or Size >4 cm or Clinical progression | Progression criteria met or Patient choice | 0.20 | n/r | 8% (3/37) | n/r | 100% (3/3) due to progression of growth rate >0.5 cm/yr | All 3/3 had RCC |
| Tayside ( | Mostly used CT. A few patients had US follow-up with conversion to CT if US showed growth or poor visualisation | n/r | Tumour growth defined as any increase in size on interval imaging | Surgery offered for solid SRM >4 cm or Patient or surgeon choice when <4 cm or Younger patients with reluctance to follow-up | 0.29 | 53.5% (94% of cystic SRM showed no growth, 36% of solid SRM showed no growth) | 19% (43/226) | n/r | n/r | n/r |
| MD Anderson ( | CT/MRI | 6-monthly | n/r | Growth rate of SRM >0.5 cm/yr or Size >4 cm or Patient choice | 0.24 (from baseline to 2-year scan) | n/r | 24% (64/272) | n/r | Patient choice 47% (14/30) within first 2 years of AS; | n/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.
AS patient characteristics for selection for entry into AS
| Study | Selection | Mean age (yrs) | Mean size of tumour (cm) | CCI grade | Baseline kidney function | Histology | Comment on patient selection | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All | AS | All | AS | All | AS | All | AS | All | AS | |||||||
| University of Michigan† ( | Retrospective analysis of prospectively entered SRM database | 60 | 63 | 2.9 | 2.3 | CCI ≥2 | CCI ≥2 | eGFR | eGFR ≤60 mL/min | 37% had RMB in | 41% had RMB | The combination of tumour size <3 cm, performance status ≥2 and endophytic lesion were most predictive of AS | ||||
| Fox Chase Cancer Center ( | Retrospective analysis of prospectively entered kidney tumour database | 63 | 71 | 3 | 2.6 | CCI ≥3 | CCI ≥3 55% | CKD | CKD | n/r | n/r | Characteristics associated with use of AS included CCI 1-2, CCI ≥3, solitary kidney, bilateral disease | ||||
| NCDB ( | Retrospective sample | 60.1 | 70.6 | 2.6 | 2.6 | CCI ≥3 | CCI ≥3 5.7% | n/r | n/r | n/r | n/r | Increasing age associated with more likely to be managed with ablation or AS | ||||
| Cleveland Clinic ( | Retrospective analysis of prospectively entered kidney tumour database | 79* | 81* | 3.3* | 2.3* | CCI ≥2 | CCI ≥2 65% | CKD | CKD | 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 ( | Prospective AS cohort | n/a | 74 | n/a | 2.3* | n/a | n/r | n/a | n/r | n/a | 7/82 had RMB; 2/7 RCC; 5/7 inadequate samples | Eligibility criteria: renal mass ≤7 cm, not surgical candidates due to advanced age, significant comorbidities or patient refusal | ||||
| DISSRM, 2015† ( | Prospective registry | 62* | 71* | 2.5* | 1.9* | CCI 1-3 | CCI 1-3 | CKD | CKD | 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%; | AS patients were older, had worse ECOG scores, total comorbidities and cardiovascular comorbidities, with tumours more likely to be multiple, smaller or bilateral | ||||
| Canada ( | Prospective non-comparative clinical trial of AS | n/a | 73 | n/a | 2.1 | n/a | n/r | n/a | n/r | n/r | All trial patients asked to | Eligibility 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† ( | Retrospective analysis of local cancer database | 62.1 | 71.9 | 2.6 | 2.3 | n/r | n/r | n/r | n/r | n/r | 7/71 had RMB of which: 2/7 RCC; 2/7Oncocytoma; 3/7 Non-diagnostic | AS patients were significantly older. No significant difference in tumour size between AS and treatment groups (RN and PN) | ||||
| Haifa ( | Retrospective analysis of AS cohort | n/a | 68 | n/a | 1.9 | n/a | Mean | n/a | n/r | n/a | n/r | Inclusion criteria for AS: risk factors for end stage renal disease, multiple major medical comorbidities, patient preference | ||||
| University of Michigan, 2016 ( | Retrospective analysis of AS cohort | n/a | 66 | n/a | 2.0 | n/a | ECOG 0 60%, ECOG 1 21%, ECOG 2 14% | n/a | eGFR m/min Mean | n/a | 51/118 had RMB of which: Benign 37%; Malignant 35%; Non-diagnostic 28% | No specific inclusion criteria for AS enrolment mentioned | ||||
| Pusan National | Prospective AS cohort | n/a | 64 | n/a | 1.8 | n/a | CCI ≥3 19% | n/a | n/r | n/a | 32% | No specific inclusion criteria for AS enrolment mentioned | ||||
| Tayside ( | Prospective AS cohort | n/a | 69.8 | n/a | 2.2 | n/a | Median | n/a | eGFR ≤60ml/min | n/a | n/r | No specific criteria for management with AS mentioned | ||||
| MD | Prospective AS cohort | n/a | 68.5 | n/a | 1.74 | n/a | Mean CCI =5.8 | n/a | Mean eGFR mL/min =72.4 | n/a | 45% had RMB of which: RCC 50%; Benign 36%; | 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.