Abstract
Preoperative computed tomography (CT) was utilized to evaluate 20 patients with primary transitional cell carcinoma of the upper urinary tracts. Of the 20 patients, 18 (90 %) had CT visualization of the tumor as either a discrete mass or local ureteral and/or renal pelvic wall thickening; 2 (10 % ) had false-negative examinations. Seven of the 20 patients (35 %) had CT evidence of tumor extension demonstrated by frank tumor invasion beyond the urothelium or by perirenal pelvic and/or periureteral fat streaks. Of the 4 patients with fat streaks, 2 (50 %) had superficial tumors (T AT 2), 1 had a T, (25 %) tumor, and 1 had a T3 (25 %) tumor. All 3 patients with CT findings of direct extension of tumor through the wall of the ureter or renal pelvis had T3 tumors. Among the 13 with localized noninvasive tumor on CT, 5 (38 %) had superficial tumors (T A, TIS, T 1), 5 (38 %) had T2 tumors, and 3 (21 %) had T3 tumors. Of the 5 patients with enlarged regional lymph nodes (≥1.5 cm) on CT, 2 had tumor confirmed histologically, 2 had subsequent negative CT-guided biopsies, and 1 had a negative lymphadenectomy. Distant metastasis was discovered in 1 patient. The data suggest that when CT demonstrates direct tumor extension through the renal pelvic or ureteral wall, it is a sensitive indicator of high-stage disease. However, in the absence of this finding, CT is of limited value in staging patients with primary transitional cell carcinoma of the pyeloureteral system.
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