European Urology

European Urology

Volume 57, issue 2, pages 179-362, February 2010

Kidney Cancer

Robotic Partial Nephrectomy for Renal Tumors Larger Than 4 cm

Manish N. Patel, L. Spencer Krane, Akshay Bhandari, Rajesh G. Laungani, Alok Shrivastava, Sameer A. Siddiqui, Mani Menon, Craig G. Rogers.

Accepted 3 November 2009, Published online 13 November 2009, pages 310 - 316


Abstract

Background

Minimally invasive partial nephrectomy (PN) is most commonly performed for renal tumors ≤4 cm in size. Robotic PN (RPN) for tumors >4 cm has not been assessed.

Objective

To evaluate the safety and feasibility of RPN for tumors >4 cm in the context of patients undergoing RPN for tumors ≤4 cm.

Design, setting, and participants

We reviewed data for 71 consecutive patients who underwent transperitoneal RPN at a tertiary care center between August 2007 and September 2009 by a single surgeon. Patients were stratified into two groups: 15 with tumors >4 cm on preoperative imaging (group 1) and 56 patients with tumors ≤4 cm (group 2).

Intervention

All patients underwent transperitoneal RPN by a single surgeon.

Measurements

Preoperative, perioperative, pathologic, and functional outcomes data were analyzed and compared between groups. We used χ2 and student t tests for categorical and continuous variables, respectively. A p value <0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results and limitations

Mean radiographic tumor size was 5.0 cm (4.1–7.9) for group 1 and 2.1 cm (0.7–3.8) for group 2. No significant differences were found between groups for estimated blood loss, total operative time, hospital stay, complication rates, and change in estimated glomerular filtration rate. Patients with larger tumors had longer median warm ischemia times (25 vs 20 min; p = 0.011). Limitations of our study include the retrospective nature the analysis, small sample size, and single-surgeon experience.

Conclusions

In our initial experience, RPN for tumors >4 cm is safe and feasible, showing comparable outcomes to RPN for smaller tumors, although with longer warm ischemia times. Future studies with extended follow-up are necessary to determine the viability of RPN for large tumors as an effective form of treatment.

Take Home Message

We evaluated perioperative outcomes of patients undergoing robotic partial nephrectomy (RPN) for tumors >4 cm. We demonstrate the safety and feasibility of RPN for tumors >4 cm, with outcomes comparable to smaller tumors, although with longer warm ischemia times.

Keywords: Renal cell carcinoma, Robotic partial nephrectomy, Warm ischemia.


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