Impact of pathological tumour characteristics in patients with sarcomatoid renal cell carcinoma

病理肿瘤特征对肉瘤样肾细胞癌患者的影响

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Abstract

Study Type - Prognosis (case series) Level of Evidence 4 What's known on the subject? and What does the study add? Sarcomatoid renal cell carcinoma can occur in the setting of all histological subtypes of kidney cancer. These tumours are very aggressive and many patients present with disseminated disease. Long-term survival is poor and the durable responses to systemic therapy are infrequent. Our large cohort analyses the influence of pathological tumour characteristics in determining prognosis for patients with sarcomatoid renal cell carcinoma undergoing surgical resection. This series helps define the prognostic influence of histological subtype, type of sarcomatoid morphology, the percentage necrosis and sarcomatoid features, and the presence of microvascular invasion. OBJECTIVES: To examine the influence of pathological tumour characteristics on survival to aid prognostication and clinical trial design. Patients with sarcomatoid renal cell carcinoma (sRCC) are known to have poor prognosis and response to systemic therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A single-centre database was reviewed to identify all patients with sRCC. Clinical variables and pathological information, including histology, necrosis, percentage of sarcomatoid features (PSF) and microvascular invasion (MVI), were recorded and correlated to outcome. RESULTS: Analyses of 104 patients with sRCC found that the median (range) size of tumours was 9.5 cm (2.5-30), 65% of patients had areas of clear cell histology, and 69.2% had metastatic disease at presentation. The PSF did not influence tumour size, stage, necrosis, MVI, nodes or metastasis. A total of 85 patients (81.7%) died during the follow-up period with a median (95% confidence interval [CI]) survival of 5.9 months (4.7-8.9). In the overall cohort, Eastern Cooperative Group performance status (ECOGPS), tumour size and metastatic disease were independent predictors of poor survival. MVI, PSF and percentage necrosis were strongly associated with outcome but were not independent predictors of outcome. A multivariate risk model was established that incorporated six covariates (tumour size, MVI, ECOGPS, PSF, necrosis, and metastatic disease) to produce a predictive tool. CONCLUSIONS: Both patients with localized and metastatic sRCC have very poor survival outcomes. Pathological features MVI, PSF and necrosis are important predictors of survival and could be used in a prognostic model while grade and histology do not influence prognosis. A prognostic model, if validated, could aid in patient counselling and/or clinical trial design.

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