Abstract

Local retroperitoneal recurrence (RPR) after racial nephrectomy (RN) of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) remains a therapeutic challenge and has a poor prognosis. We aimed to compare the oncological outcomes of patients with RPR treated with RPR surgery or targeted therapy alone and assess the prognostic factors of these patients. This is a retrospective multi-center study of patients with RPR after prior RN treated with or without surgical treatment from 2008 to 2020. RPR of RCC is defined as an ipsilateral recurrence confined to the renal fossa, adrenal gland or retroperitoneal lymph nodes after prior nephrectomy, which was diagnosed by cross-sectional imaging. Clinical and pathological features, perioperative complications were reported using descriptive statistics. Cancer-specific survival (CSS) was evaluated by Kaplan-Meier method and studied using Cox proportional hazards model. Median follow-up period was 35 months (IQR 20-61) for the RPR surgery group and 23 months (IQR 9-40.5) for the targeted therapy group. No patients had distant metastatic disease at the time of RPR diagnosis. Treatment with RPR surgery resulted in significantly longer CSS than targeted therapy alone (P < .001). In multivariable analysis, high Fuhrman grade, size of RPR tumor, mixed type of RPR, multiple recurrence lesions and the absence of RPR surgery were associated with a significantly increased risk of death from RCC. Aggressive surgical resection of RPR after RN represents a potentially curative treatment for selected RCC patients without synchronous metastases, resulting in significantly longer CSS than targeted therapy alone.

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