Mucinous tubular and spindle cell carcinoma of the kidney: A case report - Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mucinous tubular and spindle cell carcinoma (MTSC) is a rare and newly described type of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) with relatively indolent behavior.

Although there are small series of this clinical entity in the literature, its histogenetic origin or line of differentiation remains unclear.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: A 67-year-old woman was hospitalized for flank pain; imaging studies revealed a 6.5-cm mass in the right kidney. She was referred for fine needle aspiration of the lesion, which showed an epithelial tumor with round to oval nuclei associated with strands of metachromatic stromal tissue. Cytopathologic diagnosis was consistent with RCC.

RESULTS: Subsequent right heminephrectomy was performed and the surgical pathology specimen showed an MTSC of the kidney. The patient has done well postoperatively, with 24 months of benign follow-up.

CONCLUSION: A precise differential diagnosis between MTSC and other renal carcinomas (e.g. papillary RCC with sarcomatoid transformation) is important for predicting patient prognosis. Even though MTSC is a rare cause of renal masses, it should be included in the differential diagnosis, especially because its imaging might be misleading, mimicking other benign renal diseases. Heminephrectomy is the preferred treatment in these subjects.

Written by:
Chrysikos D, Zagouri F, Sergentanis TN, Goutas N, Vlachodimitropoulos D, Flessas I, Theodoropoulos G, Lymperi M, Birbas K, Zografos GC, Mariolis-Sapsakos T.   Are you the author?
1st Department of Propaedeutic Surgery, Hippokratio Hospital, University of Athens, Athens, Greece.

Reference: Case Rep Oncol. 2012 May;5(2):347-53.
doi: 10.1159/000339802


PubMed Abstract
PMID: 22807903

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