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European Urology

European Urology

Volume 60, issue 2, pages e9-e18, August 2011

Kidney Cancer

Renal Cell Carcinoma (RCC) in Patients With End-Stage Renal Disease Exhibits Many Favourable Clinical, Pathologic, and Outcome Features Compared With RCC in the General Population

Yann Neuzillet, Xavier Tillou, Romain Mathieu, Jean-Alexandre Long, Marc Gigante, Philippe Paparel, Laura Poissonnier, Hervé Baumert, Bernard Escudier, Hervé Lang, Nathalie Rioux-Leclercq, Pierre Bigot, Jean-Christophe Bernhard, Laurence Albiges, Laurence Bastien, Jacques Petit, Fabien Saint, Franck Bruyere, Jean-Michel Boutin, Nicolas Brichart, Georges Karam, Julien Branchereau, Jean-Marie Ferriere, Hervé Wallerand, Sébastien Barbet, Hicham Elkentaoui, Jacques Hubert, Benoit Feuillu, Pierre-Etienne Theveniaud, Arnauld Villers, Laurent Zini, Aurélien Descazeaux, Morgan Roupret, Benoit Barrou, Karim Fehri, Thierry Lebret, Jacques Tostain, Jean-Etienne Terrier, Nicolas Terrier, Lucille Martin, Fabrice Dugardin, Ismaël Galliot, Frédéric Staerman, Marie-Dominique Azemar, Jacques Irani, Baptiste Tisserand, Marc-Olivier Timsit, Federico Sallusto, Pascal Rischmann, Laurent Guy, Antoine Valeri, Charles Deruelle, Abdel-Rahmène Azzouzi, Denis Chautard, Arnaud Mejean, Laurent Salomon, Jérôme Rigaud, Christian Pfister, Michel Soulié, François Kleinclauss, Lionel Badet and Jean-Jacques Patard the members of the Comité de Transplantation de l’Association Française d’Urologie, the Comité de Cancérologie de l’Association Française d’Urologie.

Accepted 20 February 2011, Published online 1 March 2011, pages 366 - 373


Abstract

Background

Patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) are at risk of developing renal tumours.

Objective

Compare clinical, pathologic, and outcome features of renal cell carcinomas (RCCs) in ESRD patients and in patients from the general population.

Design, setting, and participants

Twenty-four French university departments of urology participated in this retrospective study.

Intervention

All patients were treated according to current European Association of Urology guidelines.

Measurements

Age, sex, symptoms, tumour staging and grading, histologic subtype, and outcome were recorded in a unique database. Categoric and continuous variables were compared by using chi-square and student statistical analyses. Cancer-specific survival (CSS) was assessed by Kaplan-Meier and Cox methods.

Results and limitations

The study included 1250 RCC patients: 303 with ESRD and 947 from the general population. In the ESRD patients, age at diagnosis was younger (55 ± 12 yr vs 62 ± 12 yr); mean tumour size was smaller (3.7 ± 2.6 cm vs 7.3 ± 3.8 cm); asymptomatic (87% vs 44%), low-grade (68% vs 42%), and papillary tumours were more frequent (37% vs 7%); and poor performance status (PS; 24% vs 37%) and advanced T categories (≥3) were more rare (10% vs 42%). Consistently, nodal invasion (3% vs 12%) and distant metastases (2% vs 15%) occurred less frequently in ESRD patients. After a median follow-up of 33 mo (range: 1–299 mo), 13 ESRD patients (4.3%), and 261 general population patients (27.6%) had died from cancer. In univariate analysis, histologic subtype, symptoms at diagnosis, poor PS, advanced TNM stage, high Fuhrman grade, large tumour size, and non-ESRD diagnosis context were adverse predictors for survival. However, only PS, TNM stage, and Fuhrman grade remained independent CSS predictors in multivariate analysis. The limitation of this study is related to the retrospective design.

Conclusions

RCC arising in native kidneys of ESRD patients seems to exhibit many favourable clinical, pathologic, and outcome features compared with those diagnosed in patients from the general population.

Take Home Message

Renal cell carcinoma arising in native kidneys of end-stage renal disease patients seem to exhibit many favourable clinical, pathologic, and outcome features compared with those diagnosed in general population patients.

Keywords: End-stage renal disease, Pathology, Prognosis, Renal cell carcinoma, Transplantation.


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