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      Palpable Abdominal Mass is a Renal Oncocytoma: Not All Large Renal Masses are Malignant

      case-report
      1 , 1 , 2 , 1 , 3 ,
      Case Reports in Urology
      Hindawi

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          Abstract

          A 59-year-old woman presented with abdominal pain and a palpable abdominal mass. Initial imaging revealed a 14cm solid, enhancing renal mass and suspicion for liver and bone metastases. Family history included a brother with clear cell renal cell carcinoma and mother with glioblastoma multiforme. After liver biopsy was inconclusive, she underwent radical nephrectomy with final pathologic diagnosis of oncocytoma. Renal oncocytoma is the most common benign renal tumor but remains difficult to distinguish clinically and radiographically from renal cell carcinoma. Should urologists use renal mass biopsy even more frequently prior to surgical intervention?

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          Most cited references23

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          Diagnostic criteria for oncocytic renal neoplasms: a survey of urologic pathologists

          Renal oncocytoma and chromophobe renal cell carcinoma have been long recognized as distinct tumors; however, it remains unknown if uniform diagnostic criteria are used to distinguish these tumor types in practice. A survey was distributed to urologic pathologists regarding oncocytic tumors. Responses were received from 17 of 26 invitees. Histologically, more than 1 mitotic figure was regarded as most worrisome (n=10) or incompatible (n=6) with oncocytoma diagnosis. Interpretation of focal nuclear wrinkling, focal perinuclear clearing, and multinucleation depended on extent and did not necessarily exclude oncocytoma if minor. Staining techniques most commonly used included the following: cytokeratin 7 (94%), KIT (71%), vimentin (65%), colloidal iron (59%), CD10 (53%), and AMACR (41%). Rare cytokeratin 7-positive cells (≤5%) were regarded as most supportive of oncocytoma, although an extent excluding oncocytoma was not universal. Multiple chromosomal losses were most strongly supportive for chromophobe renal cell carcinoma diagnosis (65%). Less certainty was reported for chromosomal gain or a single loss. For tumors with mixed or inconclusive features, many participants use an intermediate diagnostic category (82%) that does not label the tumor as unequivocally benign or malignant, typically "oncocytic neoplasm" or "tumor" with comment. The term "hybrid tumor" was used variably in several scenarios. A slight majority (65%) report outright diagnosis of oncocytoma in needle biopsies. The morphologic, immunohistochemical, and genetic characteristics that define oncocytic renal tumors remain incompletely understood. Further studies correlating genetics, behavior, and histology are needed to define which tumors truly warrant classification as carcinomas for patient counseling and follow-up strategies.
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            Renal oncocytoma: a clinicopathologic study of 70 cases.

            We reviewed 954 primary nonurothelial epithelial renal neoplasms with primary resection at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center between the years 1980 and 1995 and classified 70 cases (7%) as renal oncocytomas. The study population was composed of 39 men and 31 women, and the mean age was 65 years (range 25 to 86 years). Fifty-six patients (80%) were asymptomatic at presentation, six (4%) had flank pain, six (4%) presented with a mass, and two (3%) had hematuria. Sixty-one were treated with total or radical nephrectomy, nine with partial nephrectomy. The right kidney was involved in 35 cases (50%), the left kidney in 32 (46%). Three cases (4%) were bilateral. Sixty-one cases (87%) were unifocal, nine (13%) multifocal. All the tumors were well circumscribed but unencapsulated. Forty-five (64%) were described as brown or red, whereas the remainder were variously described as tan to yellow. Central fibrosis or scar was described in 23 cases (33%), and gross areas of hemorrhage or cystic changes in 14 (20%). The mean size was 5.2 cm and median 5.0 cm (range 1.5 cm to 14 cm). Histologically, the tumors were characterized by a mixture of architectural patterns: compact cellular nests and acini embedded in a hyalinized, hypocellular stroma were present in 62 cases (89%), a solid nested architecture in 47 cases (67%), and a variable tubular component in 50 cases (71%). Small papillae, pseudopapillae, and intratubular epithelial tufts were seen in 19 cases (27%). Cytologically, the neoplasms also showed a mixture of cell types, the most common being the classic oncocyte, which consisted of round or polygonal cells with moderate to abundant granular, eosinophilic cytoplasm, and small round nuclei with evenly dispersed granular chromatin. Small basophilic nucleoli were visible in many of these cells in all cases. Thirty-one cases (44%) had a variable number of oncocytic cells with pyknotic nuclei and 20 (30%) contained clusters of small cells with a high nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio and dense hyperchromatic nuclei (so-called oncoblasts). Foci of tubules with clear cells embedded in a hyalinized stroma were present in six cases (9%). Cellular atypia was evident in 42 cases (60%) and was marked in 21 (30%). Eleven cases (16%) exhibited mitotic activity, albeit low. No case had atypical mitoses or necrosis. Twenty-two cases (31%) had areas of calcification within the hyalinized stroma, 12 (17%) had calcospherites, and three (4%) had osseous and myeloid metaplasia. Vascular invasion was present in three cases (4%), and invasion of perinephric fat in 14 (20%). One patient presented with liver metastasis. Fourteen cases (20%) were pT1, 42 (60%) pT2, and 14 (20%) pT3. After a mean follow-up of 58 months (range 1 to 181), 62 patients (89%) were alive with no evidence of tumor, six (9%) had died of other causes, one was alive with stable metastatic disease in the liver 58 months after diagnosis, and one died with metastatic disease to bone and liver. We conclude that renal oncocytomas have a varied morphologic appearance and their pathologic diagnosis should be based on a constellation of architectural and cytologic features. The overwhelming majority of cases behave in a benign fashion, although in rare instances they can metastasize. The presence of atypical morphologic features do not alter the excellent prognosis associated with oncocytomas and do not predict an aggressive clinical course.
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              Renal oncocytoma: multifocality, bilateralism, metachronous tumor development and coexistent renal cell carcinoma.

              We analyzed a large series of cases of renal oncocytoma to define the incidence of coexistent renal cell carcinoma, multifocality, bilateralism and metachronous tumor development. Between 1980 and 1997, 100 men and 38 women with a mean age of 68 years with oncocytoma, were treated surgically at our institution. We analyzed tumor characteristics and reviewed specimens for coexistent renal cell carcinoma. Tumors were discovered incidentally in 58% of the cases. Specimens were obtained from 84 radical and 70 partial nephrectomies. Tumor size ranged from 0.3 to 14.5 cm. (median 3.2). Oncocytoma was unilateral in 131 cases (95%) and bilateral in 7 (5%), while there were multiple oncocytomas in 8 (6%). Mean followup was 41 months (range 0 to 200). The disease specific survival rate was 100% and no patient had metastasis. In 6 patients (4%) metachronous oncocytoma developed during followup. No patient had locally recurrent oncocytoma after partial nephrectomy for a solitary renal oncocytoma. Renal cell carcinoma and oncocytoma were found in 14 patients (10%), including unilateral synchronous disease in 9 and bilateral synchronous disease in 5. Our data support the benign nature of renal oncocytoma. Multifocality, bilateralism and metachronous tumor develop in approximately 4 to 6% of all cases. Renal cell carcinoma coexisted in 10% of oncocytoma cases.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Case Rep Urol
                Case Rep Urol
                CRIU
                Case Reports in Urology
                Hindawi
                2090-696X
                2090-6978
                2019
                8 August 2019
                : 2019
                : 6016870
                Affiliations
                1Spectrum Health, Department of Urology, Grand Rapids, MI, USA
                2Spectrum Health, Department of Pathology, MI, USA
                3Michigan State University College of Human Medicine, Grand Rapids, MI, USA
                Author notes

                Academic Editor: Fumitaka Koga

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1084-1519
                Article
                10.1155/2019/6016870
                6702843
                31485367
                e955d61a-3f5c-4b0e-8132-02e38a7f854d
                Copyright © 2019 Sumi Dey et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 23 May 2019
                : 11 July 2019
                : 18 July 2019
                Funding
                Funded by: Spectrum Health Foundation
                Categories
                Case Report

                Urology
                Urology

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