Abstract

ObjectiveTo evaluate the survival outcomes of patients with local recurrence after radical nephrectomy (RN) and to test the effect of surgery, as monotherapy or in combination with systemic treatment, on cancer-specific mortality (CSM).MethodsPatients with local recurrence after RN were abstracted from an international dataset. The primary outcome was CSM. Cox’s proportional hazard models tested the main predictors of CSM. Kaplan–Meier method estimates the 3-year survival rates.ResultsOverall, 96 patients were included. Of these, 44 (45.8%) were metastatic at the time of recurrence. The median time to recurrence after RN was 14.5 months. The 3-year cancer-specific survival rates after local recurrence were 92.3% (± 7.4%) for those who were treated with surgery and systemic therapy, 63.2% (± 13.2%) for those who only underwent surgery, 22.7% (± 0.9%) for those who only received systemic therapy and 20.5% (± 10.4%) for those who received no treatment (p < 0.001). Receiving only medical treatment (HR: 5.40, 95% CI 2.06–14.15, p = 0.001) or no treatment (HR: 5.63, 95% CI 2.21–14.92, p = 0.001) were both independently associated with higher CSM rates, even after multivariable adjustment. Following surgical treatment of local recurrence 8 (16.0%) patients reported complications, and 2/8 were graded as Clavien–Dindo ≥ 3.ConclusionsSurgical treatment of local recurrence after RN, when feasible, should be offered to patients. Moreover, its association with a systemic treatment seems to warrantee adjunctive advantages in terms of survival, even in the presence of metastases.

Highlights

  • Kidney cancer is the sixth most common cancer among men and the eighth among women, usually diagnosed as localized disease and with a generally good prognosis[1]

  • We aimed to evaluate the survival outcomes of patients with LR after radical nephrectomy (RN) and to test the effect of local recurrence surgery (LRS), as monotherapy or in combination with systemic treatment, on cancerspecific mortality (CSM)

  • Recurrences were more frequently localized in the renal fossa (50.0%) and in 44 patients (45.8%) LR was associated with distant metastases (M + stage)

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Summary

Introduction

Kidney cancer is the sixth most common cancer among men and the eighth among women, usually diagnosed as localized disease and with a generally good prognosis[1]. Treatment, and tumor’s characteristics local recurrence (LR) rates after radical nephrectomy (RN) widely range [2,3,4], with some series reporting LR rates up to 28.0% [2]. European Association of Urology (EAU) guidelines recommend to perform surgery in all patients with no adverse prognostic factors [2]. This recommendation is mostly supported by evidence from few retrospective studies [3]. The use of systemic treatments in patients with LR is debated, in particular in those with high-risk features and high disease burden [2]

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