xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis

Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis (XGP) is a rare form of chronic pyelonephritis and represents a chronic granulomatous disease resulting in a non-functioning kidney. Radiographic features are usually specific.

Epidemiology

Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis is seen essentially in all age groups, but most frequently presents in middle-aged to elderly patients . There is a 2:1 female predilection, presumably relating to an increased incidence of urinary tract infections and thus struvite (staghorn) calculi. There is also an increased incidence in patients with diabetes mellitus.

Clinical presentation

Clinical presentation is typically vague, consisting of constitutional symptoms such as malaise, weight loss and low-grade fever. Hematuria and flank pain are sometimes encountered .

Despite often absent urinary tract symptoms, pyuria and positive urinary cultures are present in the majority of cases (95 and 60% respectively) .

Pathology

Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis is, as the name suggests, a chronic granulomatous process believed to be the result of subacute/chronic infection inciting a chronic but incomplete immune reaction . Various bacteria are isolated, however, the most commonly isolated species are Escherichia coli and Proteus mirabilis .

The kidney is eventually replaced by a mass of reactive tissue, surrounding the usually present (90%) inciting staghorn calculus with associated hydronephrosis of a greater or lesser degree. Foamy (lipid-laden) macrophages predominate .

The inflammatory process eventually extends into the perinephric tissues and even adjacent organs .

Staging

One method of staging is based on the degree of involvement of the adjacent tissues :

  • stage I: the disease is confined to the renal parenchyma only
  • stage II: involves renal parenchyma as well as an extension to perirenal fat
  • stage III: disease extends into the perirenal and para­renal spaces or diffuse retroperitoneum

Radiographic features

Two forms of the disease are recognized both macroscopically and on imaging :

  • diffuse (90%)
  • focal / tumefactive form (10%)
    • sometimes a truly focal process in a normal kidney
    • in other instances, this represents diffuse XGP of one moiety of a duplex system
Plain radiograph

Plain radiograph findings are difficult to distinguish from a routine staghorn calculus, although fragmentation and enlargement of the renal outline may be seen. A calculus is not always present; in such cases, it is not possible to make a plain film diagnosis.

Ultrasound

Ultrasound examination demonstrates an enlarged and distorted renal outline, with loss of the normal renal architecture and (usually) a centrally-located shadowing calculus.

CT

CT findings are most helpful in reaching the correct diagnosis. The normal renal outline is lost and enlarged with a paradoxical contracted renal pelvis. The calyces, in contrast, are dilated giving a multiloculated appearance that has been likened to the paw print of a bear (bear's paw sign) . Sometimes there is a perinephric extension with thickening of Gerota's fascia. Calcification can be better delineated on CT scan.

CTU or conventional urography

In most cases, there is little, if any, renal function in the affected kidney .

MRI

MRI appearances mirror the heterogeneous nature of the mass with solid and cystic components surrounding a central staghorn calculus. As such, the signal is heterogeneous on all sequences.

Treatment and prognosis

If xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis becomes established, no conservative or medical therapies exist. Surgical nephrectomy is usually curative . The presence of inflammatory reaction in adjacent tissues often requires a large operative field and an anterolateral transperitoneal approach .

Differential diagnosis

The differential is narrow when the entire kidney is affected and cross-sectional imaging has been obtained and is largely limited to renal tuberculosis, however, this usually results in a shrunken calcified putty kidney.

In cases where typical features are not present (e.g. no staghorn calculus, focal disease only) then other entities to be considered include:

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