About 70% of patients with renal cell carcinoma present with localized or locally advanced disease at primary diagnosis.
Whereas these patients are potentially curable by surgical treatment alone, a further 20% to 30% of patients are diagnosed with primary metastatic disease. Although over the past years medical treatment for metastatic patients has nearly completely changed from immunotherapy to effective treatment with targeted agents, metastatic disease still represents a disease status which is not curable. Also in patients with metastatic disease, surgical treatment of the primary tumor plays an important role, since local tumor related complications can be avoided or minimized by surgery. Furthermore, also improvement of overall survival has been proven for surgery in metastatic patients when combined with cytokine treatment. Hence, surgical combined with systemic treatment as a multi-modal, adjuvant, and neo-adjuvant treatment is also required in patients with advanced or metastatic disease. A growing number of elderly and comorbid patients are currently diagnosed with small renal masses, which has led to increased attention paid to alternative ablative treatment modalities as well as active surveillance strategies, which are applied in order to avoid unnecessary overtreatment in these patients. Since surgical treatment also might enhance the risk of chronic kidney disease with consecutive cardiac disorders as well as reduced overall survival, ablative techniques and active surveillance are increasingly applied. In this review article we focus on current surgical and none-surgical treatment options for the management of patients with localized, locally advanced, and metastatic renal cell carcinoma.
Written by:
Brookman-May S, Langenhuijsen JF, Volpe A, Minervini A, Joniau S, Salagierski M, Roscigno M, Akdogan B, Vandromme A, Rodriguez-Faba O, Marszalek M. Are you the author?
Department of Urology Ludwig‑Maximilians‑University CampusGrosshadern, Munich, Germany.
Reference: Minerva Med. 2013 Jun;104(3):237-59.
PubMed Abstract
PMID: 23748279
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