AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the factors influencing the risk of removing the adrenal gland during robotic-assisted laparoscopic radical nephrectomy (RALRN) for patients with kidney cancer (cT1 and cT2).
  • It found that various tumor-related characteristics, such as tumor size and grade, did not significantly increase the risk of adrenal gland removal nor provide benefits in recurrence-free survival (RFS) after surgery.
  • The researchers concluded that adrenalectomy should only be conducted in cases where the adrenal gland is compromised, as it does not improve outcomes and is deemed a safe procedure when necessary.

Article Abstract

Background: In some cases, preservation of adrenal gland could be at risk in patients with cT1 and cT2 RCC. The aim of this study was to evaluate tumor-related factors that can potentially increase the risk of simultaneous adrenalectomy during robotic-assisted laparoscopic radical nephrectomy (RALRN) in patients with cT1-cT2 disease and the impact of performing such procedure on recurrence-free survival (RFS) and complication rates.

Methods: We used a multi-institutional kidney cancer database where we identified patients who underwent RALRN with or without adrenalectomy. We evaluated the tumor-related characteristics that could potentially increase the risk of adrenal gland resection of these patients. We also reported RFS at 12-24 months of follow-up, which was compared with an inverse probability of treatment weighted (IPTW) multivariable cox proportional hazards regression model and postoperative complications, which was compared with an IPTW multivariable logistic regression model.

Results: Tumor size, cT stage, pT stage, histologic subtype, sarcomatoid differentiation, BMI, lymph node involvement, metastatic disease, Fuhrman grade do not increase the risk of simultaneous adrenalectomy during RALRN. Moreover, RALRN with adrenalectomy had no significant benefit in RFS. No differences in post-operative complications were noted.

Conclusions: Our evaluated tumor-related characteristics did not show to impact the incidence of simultaneous adrenalectomy. Adrenal gland resection T does not provide significant benefit in recurrence-free survival. We consider that RALRN with adrenalectomy should be reserved only for patients with adrenal compromise as stated previously regardless that it has shown to be a safe procedure.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.23736/S2724-6051.19.03440-4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

simultaneous adrenalectomy
16
adrenal gland
12
increase risk
12
ralrn adrenalectomy
12
patients ct1-ct2
8
kidney cancer
8
laparoscopic radical
8
radical nephrectomy
8
risk simultaneous
8
recurrence-free survival
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!