Article Test

Home  >  Medical Research Archives  >  Issue 149  > To Be or “Node” to Be: Nodal Disease and the Role of Lymphadenectomy in the Treatment of Renal Cell Carcinoma
Published in the Medical Research Archives
May 2020 Issue

To Be or “Node” to Be: Nodal Disease and the Role of Lymphadenectomy in the Treatment of Renal Cell Carcinoma

Published on May 25, 2020

DOI 

Abstract

 

Lymph node involvement in renal cell carcinoma (RCC) correlates with poor oncologic outcomes. However, current RCC staging guidelines may not fully reflect the survival impact of lymph node positive disease. Recent data demonstrates that nodal disease has significant impact on survival and modifications to current staging guidelines have been proposed. Lymph node dissection (LND) at the time of surgical intervention for RCC remains controversial. While clinical trial data have demonstrated conflicting evidence for LND, some institutional studies suggests that carefully selected patients at high-risk for recurrence may benefit from LND. Prospectively, clinical trials are examining treating nodal disease and disease at high-risk of recurrence in the neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant setting at the time of nephrectomy. These promising trials are poised, if successful, to influence the treatment paradigm for localized RCC.

Author info

Hiren Patel, Arnav Srivastava, Eric Singer

Have an article to submit?

Submission Guidelines

Submit a manuscript

Become a member

Call for papers

Have a manuscript to publish in the society's journal?