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Pathologic examination of renal cell cancer by means of step‐sectioning
Author(s) -
Tsuchiya Kiyotaka,
Jinbo Hiroyuki,
Kurita Makoto,
Matsumoto Kazuhisa,
Okamura Keigo,
Uchida Tatsuya,
Kobayashi Mikio,
Yamanaka Hidetoshi,
Sugihara Shirou
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
international journal of urology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.172
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1442-2042
pISSN - 0919-8172
DOI - 10.1046/j.1442-2042.2000.00205.x
Subject(s) - medicine , nephrectomy , pathology , vascular invasion , cancer , nephron , renal cell carcinoma , kidney
Background: Because incidental detection of small renal cell cancers (RCC) has recently become increasingly common, nephron‐sparing surgery for these cases has been more widely performed. Renal cell cancer was investigated by means of step‐sectioning in order to determine which cases were suitable for nephron‐sparing surgery and how it should be performed.Methods: Pathology specimens obtained from 90 cases of radical nephrectomy were examined in 5 mm sections. We excluded large and invasive tumors from the present study. Particular attention was given to satellite tumor nodules (STN), pseudocapsules of the main tumor and vascular invasion.Results: Satellite tumor nodules of cancer (STN‐Ca) were found in seven of 90 cases (7.8%). Tumor size and grade was not correlated with the existence of STN‐Ca. The distance between the main tumor and STN‐Ca varied, with the pathology of the STN‐Ca mostly resembling that of the main tumor. Pseudocapsules of the main tumor were incomplete in 53 cases (58.9%), but extracapsular invasion of more than 1 mm was not seen in tumors less than 50 mm in diameter. Through step‐sectioning, a further six cases with microscopic vascular invasion were found. Vascular invasion within the main tumor was confirmed in 16 of 17 cases (94.1%) and within normal renal tissue in only one case.Conclusions: The incidence of existing STN‐Ca was not high (7.8%) in the present study, we had not any characteristics in the cases with STN‐Ca. As STN‐Ca were rarely near the main tumor, we could not expect to resect STN‐Ca with main tumor, resection to more than 1 mm outside the pseudocapsule was needed for complete resection of main tumor less than 50 mm in diameter. Normal renal tissue between the tumor and pelvis is a requirement for selecting appropriate cases in nephron‐sparing surgery, but we could not remove the risk of leaving STN‐Ca completely.