Abstract

IntroductionUrinary collecting system invasion (UCSI) has been found to have significant prognostic value for patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC). However, for RCC patients with venous tumor thrombus (VTT), only contradictory data exist regarding the prognostic efficacy of UCSI. Therefore, the aim of this study is to assess the prognostic relevance of UCSI in survival of patients with RCC and VTT.Material and methodsMedical records in a prospectively maintained institutional database were analyzed for RCC-VTT patients who had undergone nephrectomy with thrombectomy. Then, the effect of UCSI on overall survival was analyzed.ResultsThe study examined data for 114 patients, including patients with VTT present in the renal vein (35 patients, 31%), infrahepatic inferior vena cava (28 patients, 24%), and suprahepatic inferior vena cava (51 patients, 45%). Nineteen percent of patients had UCSI. The median overall survival of patients with UCSI was 9 months, whereas median overall survival was 10 months for patients without collecting system invasion. Survival and regression analyses rejected UCSI as a prognostic marker for overall survival.ConclusionsUCSI has no effect on survival in our cohort of RCC-VTT patients. Therefore, it should not be considered in risk stratification models or in treatment decision-making for this patient group.

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