6533b853fe1ef96bd12ace16
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Local excision of urothelial cancer of the upper urinary tract.
E. BechtMahmoud A. BazeedT. SchärfePeter AlkenJoachim W. Thüroffsubject
AdultMaleReoperationLocal excisionmedicine.medical_specialtyUrologyEpitheliumTumor excisionUreterPostoperative ComplicationsmedicineUrothelial cancerHumansKidney PelvisUpper urinary tractAgedUrinary bladderbusiness.industryUreteral NeoplasmsMiddle AgedKidney NeoplasmsSurgerymedicine.anatomical_structureUpper tractFemaleNeoplasm Recurrence LocalPeritoneumbusinessRenal pelvisdescription
Abstract In 9 of 93 patients (9.7%) with urothelial cancer of the upper tract (7 renal pelvis tumors, 3 ureteral tumors), conservative surgery was employed using a free peritoneal autotransplant for replacement of the renal pelvis in 5 kidneys. Absolute indications for conservative surgery were solitary kidneys/nonfunctioning contralateral kidneys in 4 patients and bilateral tumors in 1 patient. Local recurrences developed 1-3 years after operation in 4 of 6 kidneys (3 patients), 3 of which had grade-2 and grade-3 primary lesions. All patients were treated successfully by repeated local excision. In the presence of a normal contralateral kidney, local tumor excision was done electively in 4 patients (3 low-grade/low-stage lesions, 1 high-risk patient), none of these patients developed recurrences. Two patients died without evidence of tumor recurrence, 7 patients are free of tumor at an average follow-up of 23 months (range 5-65 months). Local excision of urothelial cancer should be considered not only for solitary kidneys, bilateral tumors and cases with renal failure, but also for low-stage/low-grade localized tumors, leaving the patient better prepared for later treatment of a possible recurrence due to the well recognized chance of a multiplicity of tumors in time and space.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1986-09-01 | European urology |