Renal Mass Biopsy is Associated with Reduction in Surgery for Early-Stage Kidney Cancer.

To determine whether use of renal mass biopsy may be associated with a reduction in surgery for patients with small, localized renal cell carcinoma (cT1aN0M0), especially among older patients and patients with greater comorbidity burden.

A total of 106,258 patients with cT1aN0M0 renal cell carcinoma from 2004-2015 were analyzed in the National Cancer Data Base. Multivariable logistic regression identified independent associations with non-surgical management, receipt of biopsy, and pathologic upstaging. Marginal effects were derived by age and comorbidity. A sensitivity analysis was conducted in years identifying patients undergoing active surveillance (2010-2015).

There was increased use of biopsy (8.0% to 15.3%) and non-surgical management (11.7% to 15.6%) over time. Biopsy was significantly associated with use of non-surgical management (OR 4.80 (95%CI 4.58-5.02), p<0.001) as well as active surveillance (OR 1.87 (1.69-2.07), p<0.001) in the sensitivity analysis. Individual predicted probability of undergoing non-surgical management ranged from 3% to 92% (median 31.4% with use of biopsy) and increased with age and comorbidity. Pathologic tumor upstaging (≥pT3a) occurred more frequently for patients receiving biopsy compared to no biopsy (5.8% vs. 3.3%, p<0.001). After adjustment, biopsy remained a statistically significant predictor of upstaging (OR 1.31 (95%CI 1.24-1.38), p<0.001).

Overall, biopsy demonstrated a strong, independent association with reduced use of surgery for cT1aN0M0 kidney cancer, especially with increasing age and comorbidity. The potential association of renal mass biopsy with upstaging warrants caution, but it is uncertain whether it impacts prognosis relative to true perinephric fat invasion.

Urology. 2019 Sep 16 [Epub ahead of print]

Hiten D Patel, Paige E Nichols, Zhuo Tony Su, Mohit Gupta, Joseph G Cheaib, Mohamad E Allaf, Phillip M Pierorazio

The James Buchanan Brady Urological Institute and Department of Urology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD. Electronic address: ., Department of Urology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA., The James Buchanan Brady Urological Institute and Department of Urology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.