Purpose: We evaluated the clinical implication of persistent contrast enhancement demonstrated several months after laparoscopic renal cryoablation of a small renal mass.
Patients And Methods: Between September 2000 and May 2007, 30 patients underwent laparoscopic cryosurgery for an organ-confined renal tumor measuring
Results: Of 30 patients (comprising 32 cases), by 3 months after cryosurgery, 27 (84.4%) treated renal masses demonstrated no contrast enhancement at the ablation site. However, 5 (15.6%) ablation sites showed enhancement at 3 months; three of those persisted by 6 months, but only one displayed enhancement by 9 months. The patient with persistent enhancement by 9 months underwent partial nephrectomy that demonstrated no recurrent cancer. All other enhancing ablation sites showed no enhancement by 10 months after cryotherapy without recurrence. No tumor, including those that demonstrated persistent enhancement after cryotherapy, showed enlargement at the ablation site.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates that persistent contrast enhancement at the cryoablation site is uncommon but may be detected by cross-sectional imaging up to 9 months after the procedure. The cause of persistent enhancement remains uncertain but may not be necessarily because of malignancy. These data suggest a benign etiology not necessitating further therapy and should be taken into account during post-treatment radiologic surveillance.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/end.2008.0261 | DOI Listing |
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