Does a Positive Surgical Margin After Nephron Sparing Surgery Affect Oncological Outcome in Renal Cell Carcinoma? A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Abstract

We systematically evaluated the impact of positive surgical margins (PSM) on oncological outcomes after partial nephrectomy for renal cell carcinoma. Forty-two studies comprising 101,153 subjects were included and five distinct meta-analyses were performed. PSM was associated with increased risk of local recurrence (hazard ratio (HR) 6.11—high certainty), metastasis (HR 3.29—moderate certainty), overall relapse (HR 2.25—high certainty), overall mortality (HR 1.30—moderate certainty), and may be associated with increased cancer-specific mortality (HR 1.91—low certainty). Patients with PSM should be counseled for the possibility of additional surgery, novel adjuvant therapies, and more rigorous surveillance. © 2021 Elsevier Inc.

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Carcinoma, renal cell, Humans, Kidney neoplasms, Margins of excision, Nephrectomy, Nephrons, Organ sparing treatments, Treatment outcome, Adolescent, Adult, Cancer mortality, Cancer surgery, Child, Human, Kidney metastasis, Major clinical study, Meta analysis, Nephron sparing surgery, Recurrence risk, Renal cell carcinoma, Review, Surgical margin, Systematic review, Conservative treatment, Kidney tumor, Nephron, Procedures

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