Abstract

To assess safety and effectiveness of excision of small renal cancer. We reviewed the records of 94 patients, who underwent, from 1992 to 2001, excision of renal tumor leaving around it a thin layer of grossly normal parenchyma and adjacent perinephric fat. This technique has been called enucleoresection, as it is not a simple enucleation but neither a conventional partial nephrectomy. Patients were followed up mean routine blood examination, ultrasound and computed tomography scan every 6 months for 2 years and annually thereafter. Median age was 63 years (35-76). Median tumour size was 2.1cm (1.1-4.5). Clamping of renal pedicle was performed in 54 cases. Major complications included 4 cases of haemorrhage; only 1 patient required surgical exploration. Pathological stage was pT1a in 87, pT1b in 4 and pT3a in 3 patients. Surgical margins were always negative. Median follow-up was 59 months (range 10-128). Eight patients died without evidence of tumour recurrence. One pT3a patient developed distant metastases and died 2 years after surgery. Five years survival rate was 95.7% (90/94 patients), cancer specific survival rate 98.9% (93/94) and disease free survival rate 98.9% (93/94). Enucleoresection of small renal tumors surrounded by a minimal layer of grossly normal renal parenchyma reproduces the results of partial and radical nephrectomy with minimal morbidity.

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