cystic nephroma

Cystic nephromas, previously known as multilocular cystic nephromas, are rare benign renal neoplasms classically occurring in adult females in the 4 and 5 decades. As of the 2016 WHO classification, they are considered distinct from pediatric cystic nephromas which have associated DICER1 gene mutation .

Terminology

Evolving terminology regarding cystic nephromas and other cystic renal tumors reflects ongoing changes in classification, in step with shifting understanding of the disease processes and genetic aberrations.

Classically, cystic nephromas were thought to occur in a bimodal age distribution, affecting young children and adults in middle age and the generic term "multilocular cystic renal tumor" was sometimes used.

Lesions arising in children are distinct from adult cystic nephromas on both immunohistochemical and genetic bases, and are separately categorized by WHO

As of 2016, the WHO classifies cystic nephroma within the mixed epithelial and stromal tumor (MEST) family along a spectrum of disease . The remainder of this article will discuss the adult form of cystic nephroma.

Epidemiology

  • overall rare
  • adult (typically in the 5- 6 decades)
  • females are predominantly affected

Clinical presentation

  • abdominal pain
  • palpable abdominal mass
  • asymptomatic - incidentally discovered on imaging

Pathology

Grossly, multilocular cystic renal tumors are typically unifocal multiloculated cystic masses surrounded by a thick fibrous capsule and compressed parenchyma . Calcification, hemorrhage, and necrosis are unusual.

Microscopically, these tumors are lined by flat, cuboid, or hobnail cells , while the fibrous septa may contain mature tubules .

Radiographic features

Multilocular cystic renal tumors generally have the appearance of a multilocular cystic encapsulated mass on most modalities.

Plain radiograph

May present as a large abdominal mass displacing and effacing adjacent bowel loops.

Ultrasound
  • multilocular cystic mass originating from kidney  
    • claw or beak-shape of adjacent renal parenchyma (claw sign) may help confirm a renal origin
  • cyst contents usually anechoic, but low-level echoes may be seen
  • septal vascularity can also be seen
CT
  • multilocular cystic mass often herniates into the renal pelvis
  • variable septal enhancement
  • no nodular or solid enhancement  
  • +/- associated streakiness in perirenal fat
MRI

Signal characteristics include:

  • T1: variable signal, depending on the protein or blood products of the cysts
  • T2: hyperintense (cysts)
  • T1 C+ (Gd): septal enhancement may be seen

Treatment and prognosis

Radical or partial nephrectomy is usually done, with lymph node excision.

Differential diagnosis

Cystic nephroma is indistinguishable from multilocular cystic renal neoplasm of low malignant potential, formerly multilocular cystic renal cell carcinoma .

See also

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