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An Illustrated Guide to Pediatric Urology ( PDFDrive ).pdf
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4 Renal Tumors in Children

 

 

Lymphomatous involvement of the kidney typically does not produce symptoms until late in the disease.

Renal involvement is normally unilateral.

Bilateral involvement is unusual.

The clinical presentation is similar to the other renal malignancies.

Flank or abdominal pain is the most frequent symptom.

PRL can present with proteinuria or nephrotic syndrome and rapidly progress to renal failure, especially when both kidneys are affected.

PRL has been associated with inflammatory and infectious chronic diseases, such as chronic pyelonephritis, Sjögren’s syndrome, systemic erythematous lupus, or Epstein-Barr virus.

The clinical presentations of renal lymphomas include:

Flank or abdominal pain

Hematuria

Abdominal mass

Fever

Weight loss

Acute renal failure

Hypertension is rare

4.8.5Treatment and Prognosis

The treatment of renal lymphoma depends on the primary histological subtype. The addition of Rituximab to the standard CHOP chemotherapy may improve the dismal outcome reported so far.

Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common histology.

A follicular lymphoma, small lymphocytic lymphoma or MALToma is not unusual.

Patients with atypical features of renal cell carcinoma should undergo a preoperative percutaneous renal biopsy.

Nephrectomy can be avoided if a preoperative diagnosis is made.

Systemic chemotherapy is currently the first treatment option for PRL.

Treatment is mainly with chemotherapy; however careful nephrological monitoring is necessary during treatment since excretion of

tumor metabolites may result in renal obstructive or uric acid nephropathy.

The treatment of non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (NHL) has been revolutionized with addition of Rituximab to the standard chemotherapy. This may overcome the poor outlook of this rare presentation of lymphoma.

PRL has a poor prognosis with rapid dissemination and a 75 % mortality rate 1 year after diagnosis.

However, early diagnosis combined with chemotherapy + rituximab could improve survival rates.

4.9Ossifying Renal Tumor of Infancy

Ossifying renal tumor of infancy is a very rare benign renal tumor.

Ossifying renal tumor of infancy was first described by Chatten in 1980 as a variant of pediatric renal tumors.

It is an extremely rare, benign renal tumor with classic clinical, radiological and histopathological features.

The Patients age at presentation ranges from 6 days to 14 months.

Boys are more commonly affected than girls.

The left kidney is affected much more than the right (80 %).

The upper pole calices are the commonest site involved.

Etiology:

The etiology of this tumor has not yet been established.

The origin and natural history of the lesion are also uncertain.

Some investigators believe that the ossification is the result of the osteogenic potential of urothelial cells.

Others hypothesize that the spindle cells within the lesion resemble those seen in intralobar nephrogenic rests and that these lesions may lie within the pathologic spectrum of Wilms tumor.