Indications for adrenalectomy during radical nephrectomy for renal cancer

Gabr, Ahmed H. and Steinberg, Zoe and Eggener, Scott E. and Stuart Wolf, J. (2014) Indications for adrenalectomy during radical nephrectomy for renal cancer. Arab Journal of Urology, 12 (4). pp. 304-308. ISSN 2090-598X

[thumbnail of Indications for adrenalectomy during radical nephrectomy for renal cancer.pdf] Text
Indications for adrenalectomy during radical nephrectomy for renal cancer.pdf - Published Version

Download (782kB)

Abstract

Objectives:
To determine if the selection criteria for ipsilateral adrenalectomy during laparoscopic radical nephrectomy (RN) can be further restricted, with the goal of sparing more patients unnecessary adrenalectomy while preserving the removal of adrenal glands containing malignancy, as recent evidence suggests that adrenalectomy in association with RN for renal cancer can be limited to patients with abnormalities on adrenal imaging or large upper-pole renal tumours.

Patients and methods:
The cohort consisted of two data sets, each from one institution, i.e., a training set and a validation set. All patients underwent RN for radiographically localised disease. Removal of the adrenal gland was based on the surgeon’s preference, related to the presence of a suspect adrenal lesion on preoperative imaging, suspicion for involvement of the adrenal gland intraoperatively, location of the tumour, size of the tumour and local tumour stage.

Results:
Of 159 patients in the training cohort, three (2%) had metastatic renal cancer in the ipsilateral adrenal gland. All three patients had tumours of >7 cm and either an abnormal radiographic appearance of the adrenal gland or suspect intraoperative findings. In the validation cohort of 74 patients, seven (10%) had adrenal metastasis, of which one had a tumour of <7 cm and the indication for adrenalectomy was the high intraoperative suspicion.

Conclusion:
We recommend performing ipsilateral adrenalectomy in association with RN for renal cancer when there is either abnormal radiographic appearance of the adrenal gland or suspect intraoperative findings, with no regard for primary tumour size.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Science Repository > Medical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 10 Oct 2023 05:18
Last Modified: 10 Oct 2023 05:18
URI: http://research.manuscritpub.com/id/eprint/2648

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item