The Current Role of Lymph Node Dissection in Nonmetastatic Localized Renal Cell Carcinoma
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Evidence Acquisition
2.1. Relevant Anatomy and Lymph Node Dissection Templates
2.2. Evidence Supporting Lymph Node Dissection
2.3. Evidence against Lymph Node Dissection and Related Complications
2.4. When to Perform Lymph Node Dissection
2.5. Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy
3. Future Direction
4. Summary and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | Year | Recommendations for LND |
---|---|---|
AUA [11] | 2021 | LND should include all clinically positive lymph nodes for patients undergoing surgical excision of renal masses with clinically suspicious lymphadenopathy |
NCCN [12] | 2022 | LND at the time of surgery for patients with palpable or visibly enlarged lymph nodes or lymphadenopathy on preoperative imaging |
EAU [13] | 2022 | LND is not recommended for patients with organ-confined disease; LND during nephrectomy should remove clinically enlarged lymph nodes for staging, prognosis, and follow-up implications |
Reference | Country | Journal | Year Published | Study Type | Study Duration | Sample Size | Study Population | Intervention | Main Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gershman [21] | USA | European Urology | 2017 | Retrospective | 1980–2010 | 138 | pN1M0 | PN or RN with LND | Patients who experienced MFS 5 years after LND also experienced MFS at longer follow-up: 5- and 10-year MFS (16 and 10%), CSS (26 and 21%), and OS (25 and 15%) |
Tachibana [22] | USA | Urologic Oncology | 2022 | Retrospective | 2000–2019 | 45 | pTanyN0-1M0 | Nephrectomy with limited * or template LND | Template LND (left-side paraaortic nodes from crus of diaphragm to common iliac artery and right-side paracaval and interaortocaval nodes with the same boundaries) associated with improved 5-year OS in patients with disease limited to 1–2 LNs (60.3% compared with 39.3% for patients who underwent limited LND) |
Whitson [23] | USA | Journal of Urology | 2011 | Retrospective | 1988–2006 | 9586 | pTanyNanyM0 | PN or RN with LND | LND extent associated with improved CSS for patients with pN1 disease: 5-year predicted probability of DSS is 39% in patients with 5 LNs removed and 49% in patients with 15 LNs removed; 10% absolute increase in DSS at 5 years when LND is increased to 10 nodes in a patient with 1 positive node |
Capitanio [24] | Italy | Urologia Journal | 2012 | Retrospective | 1987–2011 | 44 | pT4 | Nephrectomy with regional (hilar region and right-side precaval or left-side paraaortic nodes from adrenal vein to aortic bifurcation and interaortocaval nodes) or extended LND | Extended LND (left-side paraaortic and preaortic nodes from crus of diaphragm to aortic bifurcation and right-side retro/precaval nodes from adrenal vein to aortic bifurcation and interaortocaval nodes) associated with decreased CSM (HR 0.84) Removal of each additional LN resulted in 8% decrease in risk of dying |
Capitanio [25] | Italy | BJU International | 2014 | Retrospective | 1987–2011 | 1983 | pTanyNanyMany | PN or RN with no LND, limited LND (ipsilateral hilar nodes), regional LND (limited LND plus right side pre-retrocaval nodes or left side paraaortic nodes), or extended LND (regional LND plus interaortocaval nodes) | LND extent associated with improved CSS (3–18% increase) in specific subgroups with: pT2a-pT2b tumors (HR 0.91) pT3c-pT4 tumors (HR 0.89) >10 cm tumors (HR 0.97) Sarcomatoid component (HR 0.81) Removal of each additional LN resulted in a 3–11% decrease in risk of metastatic progression |
Laganosky [26] | USA | Asian Journal of Urology | 2020 | Retrospective | 2004–2015 | 4397 | T3-4NanyM0 | PN or RN with extended LND or non-extended LND | Extended LND (≥10 LNs removed) associated with improved 5-year CSS (61.4% compared with 55.2% for those with non-extended LND) and OS (59.2% compared with 51.1% for those with non-extended LND) in patients with T3b-T3c disease Extended LND associated with improved 5-year OS (50.0% compared with 30.1% for those with non-extended LND) in patients with T4 disease |
Bacic [27] | USA | Urology | 2020 | Retrospective | 2004–2013 | EORTC 30881 Trial Emulation 67388 High-risk Trial Emulation 69477 | cT1-3cN0cM0 cT1-4cN0-1cM0 | RN with or without LND | LND not associated with improved OS in both trial emulations |
Gershman [28] | USA | European Urology | 2017 | Retrospective | 1990–2010 | 1797 | pTanyNanyM0 | RN with or without LND | LND not associated with decreased risk of distant metastases, CSM, or ACM |
Ristau [29] | USA | Journal of Urology | 2018 | Prospective | 2006–2010 | 1943 | pTanyNanyM0 | PN or RN with or without LND | LND not associated with improved OS; LND associated with worse DFS |
Marchioni [10] | USA | BJU International | 2018 | Retrospective | 2001–2013 | 25357 | pT2-3NanyM0 | RN with or without LND | LND extent associated with small decrease in CSM in patients with positive nodes |
Shi [30] | Multiple | Frontiers in Oncology | 2021 | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Variable | 135514 | TanyNanyM0 | Nephrectomy with or without LND | LND not associated with improved OS; LND associated with a negative effect on CSS |
Feuerstein [8] | USA | World Journal of Urology | 2014 | Retrospective | 1990–2012 | 524 | pT2-4N0-1M0 | PN or RN with or without LND | LND not associated with improved DFS or OS |
Li [31] | China USA | Journal of Cancer | 2019 | Retrospective | 2006–2013 2010–2014 | 245 182 | pT3 | RN with or without LND | LND not associated with improved PFS, CSS, or OS; extended LND associated with worse OS |
Gershman [32] | USA | Journal of Urology | 2018 | Retrospective | 1990–2010 | 2722 | pTanyM0 | RN with or without LND | LND not associated with decreased CSM or ACM but associated with increased risk of distant metastases in overall cohort; LND not associated with decreased risk of distant metastases, CSM, or ACM in patients with cN1 disease or increasing probability thresholds of pN1 disease |
Kokorovic [33] | Canada | Urologic Oncology | 2021 | Retrospective | 2011–2019 | 2699 | TanycN0-1M0 | RN with or without LND | LND not associated with improved OS, RFS, or CSS, even in patients with increasing probability thresholds of pN1 disease; LND associated with increased risk for mortality; LND extent not associated with improved OS or CFS; LND extent associated with worse RFS |
Blom [4] | Europe | European Urology | 2009 | RCT | 1988–1991 | 772 | T1-3 | RN with or without LND | LND not associated with improved OS or PFS |
Modality | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) |
---|---|---|
Ultrasound | 100 | Not reported |
CT | 60–100 | 75–98.1 |
MDCT | 75–77 | 75–82 |
MRI | 100 | 92 |
LNMRI | 100 | 95.7 |
FDG-CT | 75–87 | 100 |
Model | Year Published | Parameters | Accuracy | Risk of Lymph Node Metastasis |
---|---|---|---|---|
Blute [58] | 2004 | Number of features: Nuclear grade 3 or 4 Presence of sarcomatoid component Tumor size ≥ 10 cm Tumor stage pT3 or pT4 Presence of histological tumor necrosis | Not reported | Number of features present—risk of LNM: 0–0.4% 1–1.0% 2–4.4% 3–12.4% 4–13.2% 5–53.3% |
Hutterer [59] | 2007 | Nomogram using: Age Tumor size Symptom classification (local vs. asymptomatic and systemic vs. asymptomatic) | 78.4% | Presence of local symptoms showed 2-fold increase in LNM rate and presence of systemic symptoms showed 2.8-fold increase in LNM rate |
Capitanio [61] | 2013 | Nomogram using: Clinical T3–T4 Clinical nodal status Metastasis at diagnosis Clinical tumor size | 86.9% | T3-4 vs. T1-2 showed a 1.5-fold increase in LNM rate Clinical nodal status (cN1 vs. cN0) showed a 7-fold increase in LNM Tumor size shown to have a significant association as well |
Babaian [62] | 2015 | Nomogram using: Local symptoms ECOG performance status Clinical nodal stage Lactate dehydrogenase | 89% | |
Gershman [63] | 2016 | Clinical and radiographic features: Maximum lymph node short-axis diameter Radiographic perinephric/sinus fat invasion | 85% | Maximum lymph node short axis diameter (OR 1.19) Radiographic perinephric/sinus fat invasion (OR 44.64) |
Li [64] | 2019 | Nomogram using: Age at surgery Clinical tumor stage Clinical nodal stage Lymphocyte percentage Clinical symptoms (lumbar pain, hematuria, or palpable mass) | 82.4% |
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Ngai, M.; Chandrasekar, T.; Bratslavsky, G.; Goldberg, H. The Current Role of Lymph Node Dissection in Nonmetastatic Localized Renal Cell Carcinoma. J. Clin. Med. 2023, 12, 3732. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12113732
Ngai M, Chandrasekar T, Bratslavsky G, Goldberg H. The Current Role of Lymph Node Dissection in Nonmetastatic Localized Renal Cell Carcinoma. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2023; 12(11):3732. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12113732
Chicago/Turabian StyleNgai, Megan, Thenappan Chandrasekar, Gennady Bratslavsky, and Hanan Goldberg. 2023. "The Current Role of Lymph Node Dissection in Nonmetastatic Localized Renal Cell Carcinoma" Journal of Clinical Medicine 12, no. 11: 3732. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12113732
APA StyleNgai, M., Chandrasekar, T., Bratslavsky, G., & Goldberg, H. (2023). The Current Role of Lymph Node Dissection in Nonmetastatic Localized Renal Cell Carcinoma. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 12(11), 3732. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12113732