Relapsed metachronous pancreatic metastasis from renal cell carcinoma (RCC): Report of a case and review of literature - Abstract

AIM: The pancreas is a preferred site of metastasis from renal cell carcinoma (RCC), that may occur even after many years from a radical nephrectomy.

Surgical R0 resection remains the only potentially curative treatment for solitary tumor. The possibility of a multifocality of the lesions (20-45%) must be considered.

MATERIAL OF STUDY: We report a case of metachronous pancreatic metastasis from RCC that occurred twice. After five years from a right polar inferior nephrectomy for a RCC, two nodular lesions were identified in the body-tail of the pancreas and were treated with distal pancreatectomy and splenectomy. After six months the CT imaging revealed a nodular lesion of few millimeters in the residual pancreatic body; we followed the slow growth and in October 2012, when the size reached 2 cm, the patient was operated to remove the residual portion of pancreatic body. After 16 months of follow-up the patient is well and there isn't relapse of disease.

DISCUSSION: Patients with metachronous pancreatic lesions represent a particular group with a more indolent course of RCC, the appearance of metastases after a prolonged interval from nephrectomy is related to a more favorable prognosis. Radical lymph-node dissection is not necessary for the uncommon involvement of peripancreatic nodes, condition that explains the positive outcomes achieved with surgery.

CONCLUSION: Patients with resected metastasis present an 88% survival rate at 5 years versus 47% observed in nonoperated patients; studies provide encouraging results in survival and quality of life of surgically treated patients.

Written by:
Macrì A, Fleres F, Putortì A, Lentini M, Ascenti G, Mastrojeni C.   Are you the author?

Reference: Ann Ital Chir. 2014 Oct 7;85(ePub).


PubMed Abstract
PMID: 25285511

Article in English, Italian.

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