Background: For patients with cT1 renal lesions, Partial Nephrectomy (PN) is the gold standard treatment. However, 20% of small renal masses are benign, situation in which the PN is an overtreatment. The percutaneous Renal Tumor Biopsy (RTB) may lower the risk of overtreatment as there is a 90% concordance rate on histotype between the RTB and the final pathology. It has been suggested that the RTB could increase the difficulty of the PN and increase the risk of surgical complications.
Objective: To compare surgical outcomes and complications of PN with or without previous RTB.
Design, Setting, and Participants: monocentric retrospective review of patients who underwent laparoscopic or robotic-assisted PN between January 2012 and December 2019.
Measurements: perioperative complications were recorded using Clavien-Dindo classification, peroperative data included operative time, clamping time and blood loss, and histological outcomes of RTB and PN.
Results and Limitations: In total, 163 patients were included in our study. There were significantly less benign lesions in PN with prior RTB: 7% (4/56) vs. 20% (22/107) without prior RTB (P=0.03). There were no significant differences regarding Clavien-Dindo>2 perioperative complications with respectively 7% (4/56) vs. 10% (11/107) (P=0.57). Same goes for peroperative data such as duration of surgery (P=0.81), warm ischemia (P=0.07) and blood loss (P=0.13).
Conclusions: RTB does not increase the risk of surgical complications of PN and may reduce the risk of small renal masses overtreatment.
(Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.)