Prognostic impact of muscular venous branch invasion in localized renal cell carcinoma cases Journal Article


Authors: Feifer, A.; Savage, C.; Rayala, H.; Lowrance, W.; Gotto, G.; Sprenkle, P.; Gupta, A.; Taylor, J.; Bernstein, M.; Adeniran, A.; Tickoo, S. K.; Reuter, V. E.; Russo, P.
Article Title: Prognostic impact of muscular venous branch invasion in localized renal cell carcinoma cases
Abstract: Purpose Beginning with the 2002 American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system, renal sinus muscular venous branch invasion has prognostic equivalence with renal vein invasion in renal cell carcinoma cases. To validate this presumed equivalence we compared patients with isolated muscular venous branch invasion to those with renal vein invasion and those with no confirmed vascular invasion. Materials and Methods From routine cataloging at our institution we identified 500 patients who underwent partial or radical nephrectomy from 2003 to 2008. After excluding patients with metastasis or noncortical renal cell carcinoma pathology we identified 85 with positive muscular venous branch invasion (+). The 259 patients with pT1-2 muscular venous branch (-) invasion and the 71 with renal vein (+) invasion served as comparison groups. We used a multivariate Cox model to control for tumor characteristics using the Kattan renal cell carcinoma nomogram. Results On multivariate analysis the risk of recurrence in the pT1-2 muscular venous branch invasion (-) group was lower than in the muscular venous branch invasion (+) group (HR 0.06, 95% CI 0.020.18, p <0.001). Patients with renal vein invasion (+) had a recurrence rate similar to that in those with muscular venous branch invasion (+) (HR 0.80, 95% CI 0.391.65, p = 0.6). The overall survival rate was higher in the muscular venous branch invasion (-) group than in the other groups. Conclusions Patients with muscular venous branch invasion have an outcome inferior to that in patients with pT1-2 disease. This confirms the adverse prognosis of muscular venous branch invasion and supports pathological up-staging. The prognosis of muscular venous branch invasion is similar to that of renal vein invasion, although we cannot exclude the possibility of a difference. Our findings underscore the importance of close patient followup and careful pathological assessment of the nephrectomy specimen. © 2011 American Urological Association Education and Research, Inc.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; aged; major clinical study; cancer localization; cancer recurrence; comparative study; cancer staging; recurrence risk; sensitivity analysis; pathology; kidney carcinoma; nephrectomy; cancer invasion; proportional hazards model; kidney; carcinoma, renal cell; multivariate analysis; neoplasm invasiveness; hazard ratio; nomogram; muscles; kidney vein; veins; muscular venous branch invasion
Journal Title: Journal of Urology
Volume: 185
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0022-5347
Publisher: Elsevier Science, Inc.  
Date Published: 2011-01-01
Start Page: 37
End Page: 42
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.juro.2010.08.084
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 21074196
PMCID: PMC3437930
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 4 March 2011" - "CODEN: JOURA" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. Caroline Savage
    80 Savage
  2. Paul Russo
    581 Russo
  3. Heidi Johanna Rayala
    2 Rayala
  4. Satish K Tickoo
    483 Tickoo
  5. Jennifer Marie Taylor
    11 Taylor
  6. Andrew Feifer
    18 Feifer
  7. Geoffrey Thomas Gotto
    9 Gotto
  8. Amit Gupta
    10 Gupta
  9. Victor Reuter
    1228 Reuter