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Initial Observation of a Large Proportion of Patients Presenting with Clinical Stage T1 Renal Masses: Results from the MUSIC-KIDNEY Statewide Collaborative

Amit Patel, Craig Rogers, Anna Johnson, Sabrina L. Noyes, Ji Qi, David C. Miller, Edward Shervish, Benjamin R. Stockton, Brian R. Lane

2020European Urology Open Science18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

While surgical excision remains the principal management strategy for clinical T1 renal masses (cT1RMs), the rates of noninterventional approaches are not well known. Most single-institution and population-based series suggest rates below 10%. To evaluate the use of observation for newly diagnosed cT1RM patients in academic and community-based practices across a statewide collaborative. The Michigan Urological Surgery Improvement Collaborative—Kidney mass: Identifying and Defining Necessary Evaluation and therapY (MUSIC-KIDNEY) commenced data collection in September 2017 by recording clinical, radiographic, pathologic, and short-term follow-up data for cT1RM patients at 13 diverse practices. Patients with complete data were assessed at >90 d after initial evaluation as to whether observation or treatment was performed. Relationships with outcomes were analyzed using multivariable logistic regression, chi-square test, and Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Out of 965 patients, observation was employed in 48% (n = 459), with practice-level rates ranging from 0% to 68%. Patients managed with observation (vs treatment) were significantly older (71.2 vs 62.8 yr, p < 0.0001) and had smaller tumors (2.3 vs 3.4 cm, p < 0.0001). Observation was used for 53.5% of cT1a renal masses, for 29.9% of cT1b renal masses, and for 42.5%, 53.7%, and 63.9% of radiographically solid, Bosniak III–IV cystic, and indeterminate cT1RMs, respectively. Factors significantly associated with observation in multivariable analysis included lesion type (Bosniak III–IV vs solid, p = 0.017), tumor stage (cT1a vs cT1b, p < 0.001), and higher age (p < 0.001). A short duration of follow-up limits the assessment of longer-term patient management. Noninterventional management of cT1RMs is common across the MUSIC-KIDNEY collaborative, with wide variability across practices. Factors associated with observation were advanced age, smaller tumor size, and cystic tumor type. Durability of the initial decision for observation (delayed intervention vs active surveillance vs less active surveillance) will be a focus of subsequent study. The Michigan Urological Surgery Improvement Collaborative: Kidney mass: Identifying and Defining Necessary Evaluation and therapY (MUSIC-KIDNEY) quality improvement collaborative assessed the current utilization of initial observation of a renal mass ≤7 cm across a diverse group of urology practices and found it to be used in 48% of patients. We found that the factors predicting observation were advanced age, smaller tumor size, and cystic tumor type.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineLogistic regressionRenal massWilcoxon signed-rank testStage (stratigraphy)PopulationCohortSurgeryNephrectomyKidneyInternal medicineMann–Whitney U testPaleontologyEnvironmental healthBiologyRenal cell carcinoma treatmentRenal and related cancersBladder and Urothelial Cancer Treatments
Initial Observation of a Large Proportion of Patients Presenting with Clinical Stage T1 Renal Masses: Results from the MUSIC-KIDNEY Statewide Collaborative | Litcius