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Renal and cardiovascular morbidity after partial or radical nephrectomy

โœ Scribed by David C. Miller; Matthias Schonlau; Mark S. Litwin; Julie Lai; Christopher S. Saigal


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
175 KB
Volume
112
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-543X

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

BACKGROUND.

To clarify the benefits of nephronโ€sparing surgery among patients with earlyโ€stage kidney cancer, the authors compared the frequency of renal and cardiovascular morbidity after partial or radical nephrectomy.

METHODS.

This retrospective cohort study was based on linked Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Resultsโ€Medicare data. The authors identified 10,886 patients who underwent partial or radical nephrectomy between 1991 and 2002. Medical claims were examined for the occurrence of adverse renal and/or cardiovascular outcomes, and multivariate survival models were fit to estimate the association between type of surgery and each clinical outcome, using propensity scores to balance the treatment cohorts with respect to measured patient and disease characteristics. To control for secular trends in the indications for partial nephrectomy, separate analyses were performed based on treatment era (1991โ€“1999 or 2000โ€“2002).

RESULTS.

During the study interval, 10,123 patients (93%) and 763 patients (7%) underwent radical or partial nephrectomy, respectively. During 2000 to 2002, patients who underwent partial nephrectomy experienced fewer adverse renal outcomes (16.4% vs 21.8%; adjusted hazard ratio, 0.74; 95% confidence interval, 0.58โ€0.94), including a trend toward less frequent receipt of dialysis services, dialysis access surgery, or renal transplantation. The likelihood of adverse cardiovascular outcomes did not differ by treatment.

CONCLUSIONS.

Among contemporary patients, partial nephrectomy was associated with less clinically apparent renal morbidity than radical nephrectomy. This finding motivates expanded use of partial nephrectomy among patients with earlyโ€stage kidney cancer. Given the potential for selection bias and residual confounding in this observational cohort, additional prospective studies will be necessary to validate the current findings. Cancer 2008. ยฉ 2007 American Cancer Society.


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