B/3. Tumors of the pyelon and ureter Flashcards
tumors of pyelon and ureter are =
upper tract urothelial cancer (UTUC)
Transitional cell tumors (urothelial carcinoma) include
- bladder cancer (90%)
- renal pelvis tumor (8%)
- ureter or urethra tumor (2%).
UTUCs (upper tract urothelial cancer) share most features with
what are the exceptions
urothelial carcinoma of the bladder
* exceptions and specific points regarding UTUC’s
*Urothelial tumors can spread to urothelial structures that are either distal or proximal to the primary tumor (so called ‘drop metastases’).
*Upper urinary tract tumors frequently are multiple or occur synchronously with
bladder tumors (in up to 17% of cases)
*neoplastic cells can flow down from the renal pelvis
or reflux from the bladder to the ureter, forming an invasive implant
what is ‘drop metastases
- Urothelial tumors can spread to urothelial structures that are either distal or proximal to the primary tumor (so called drop metastases)
Tumors of the pyelon and ureter age and gender
mean age of diagnosis 73 years,
male to female ratio 2:1
etiology of Tumors of the pyelon and ureter
Lynch syndrome/Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (DNA mismatch repair) is associated with 10% increased risk of renal pelvis and ureter cancers, but not with bladder cancer.
Lynch syndrome
- (DNA mismatch repair)
- is associated with increased risk of renal pelvis and ureter cancers,
- but not with bladder cancer.
clinical findings of Tumors of the pyelon and ureter
- Painless gross hematuria 70-80% of cases)
- flank pain (30-40% of cases)
- less commonly palpable mass
diagnostics of Tumors of the pyelon and ureter
- CT urography or MRI urography
- further imaging modalities include
*retrograde pyelography (demonstrates filling defect)
*and flexible ureteropyeloscopy. - Urine cytology is usually positive only in advanced disease
when is urin cytology positive in pyelon and ureter tumors
Urine cytology is usually positive only in advanced disease.
Treatment of pyelon and ureter tumors depends on
depends on staging at the time of diagnosis
Localized pyelon and ureter tumor surgical approach treatments
- Depending on tumor characteristics (location, size, stage) and patient risk group
- surgical approach:
*Endoscopic laser ablation
*Percutaneous nephroscopy resection
*Segmental ureterectomy + ureter neo-implantation (if tumor is localized to the distal part of the ureter)- Psoas-hitch technique (ureter neo-implantation)
- Boari bladder flap (ureter neo-implantation)
- Radical nephron-ureterectomy
- Adjuvant chemotherapy: BCG, Mitomycin C, MVAC, GC
Segmental ureterectomy + ureter neo-implantation when is it done?
- (if tumor is localized to the distal part of the ureter)
- Psoas-hitch technique (ureter neo-implantation)
- Boari bladder flap (ureter neo-implantation)
when is LN resection considered in pyelon and ureter tumors
which LN?
- considered based on imaging or intraoperative findings (involved
node : kidney hilum nodes, para-aortic nodes, pelvic nodes
Systemic chemotherapy (GC or MVAC protocols) is considered in case of positive surgical margins and/or LN involvement
Adjuvant chemotherapy in localized pyelon, ureter tumors
- Consider Mitomycin-C instillation post-operatively
- BCG instillation should be considered for selected cases of CIS
- Systemic chemotherapy (GC or MVAC protocols) is considered in case of positive surgical margins and/or LN involvement