Acquired cystic disease-associated renal cell carcinoma
2021-07-09 Michelle S. Hirsch, MD , Paola Dal Cin, PhD Affiliation1.Brigham and Women's Hospital , Harvard Medical School, Boston , MA (USA)
Keywords
Acquired cystic kidney disease, End-stage renal disease, Kidney transplantation, KMT2C mutation, TSC2 mutationClassification
Definition
Acquired cystic disease (ACD)-associated renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is the most common tumour in patients with acquired cystic kidney disease (ACKD) in end-stage renal disease (ESRD)
Clinics and Pathology
Epidemiology
Clinical features
Incidentally diagnosed on radiologic follow-up in patients with chronic renal disease, or at the time of nephrectomy/transplantation.
Macroscopic apperances
Solitary or multifocal, and sometimes bilateral, well circumscribed tumor(s), also in association with atypical cysts (Fig.1A), adenomas, or other additional renal neoplasms (ie, papillary RCC).
Histopathology
The tumors have a yellow to tan cut surface and a variable growth patterns; however, papillary, solid, cystic and sieve-like features predominant. . Clear cell cytology is multifocally present, and occasionally small vacuoles are present within the cytoplasm giving a microcystic appearance (Fig.1B) . Oxalate crystal deposits (Fig.1C) are frequently seen in areas of neoplasia as well as in the non-neoplastic tissue. 2 In contrast to papillary RCC, most ACD-associated RCCs are CK7 negative.

Fig 1: Acquired cystic disease-associated RCC occurs in the setting of acquired cystic and chronic end stage kidney disease. The tumor presents as a mass in an atrophic kidney often with multiple cortical cysts (A, gross image). The tumor has heterogeneous morphologic findings including solid, papillary, cystic and sieve-like growth patterns and eosinophilic to focally clear cell cytology (B). Although not required for the diagnosis, oxalate crystals are often seen within the tumor (C).
Cytogenetics
Prognosis and treatment
Indolent clinical behavior, but occasionally can metastasize if a high-grade tumor with sarcomatous or rhabdoid features
Genetics
Article Bibliography
| Reference Number | Pubmed ID | Last Year | Title | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 16434887 | 2006 | Spectrum of epithelial neoplasms in end-stage renal disease: an experience from 66 tumor-bearing kidneys with emphasis on histologic patterns distinct from those in sporadic adult renal neoplasia. | Tickoo SK et al |
| 2 | 28353376 | 2017 | Acquired Cystic Disease-Associated Renal Cell Carcinoma: Review of Pathogenesis, Morphology, Ancillary Tests, and Clinical Features. | Foshat M et al |
| 3 | 30187581 | 2018 | Acquired cystic disease-associated renal cell carcinoma is the most common subtype in long-term dialyzed patients: Central pathology results according to the 2016 WHO classification in a multi-institutional study. | Kondo T et al |
| 4 | 21267700 | 2010 | Acquired cystic disease-associated renal cell carcinoma with gain of chromosomes 3, 7, and 16, gain of chromosome X, and loss of chromosome Y. | Kuroda N et al |
| 5 | 21751153 | 2011 | Review of acquired cystic disease-associated renal cell carcinoma with focus on pathobiological aspects. | Kuroda N et al |
| 6 | 32604168 | 2020 | Acquired Cystic Kidney Disease-associated Renal Cell Carcinoma (ACKD-RCC) Harbor Recurrent Mutations in KMT2C and TSC2 Genes. | Shah A et al |
| 7 | 2951720 | 1987 | [Benign monoclonal immunoglobulin G associated with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, not disappearing after thyroidectomy]. | Heim M et al |
Citation
Michelle S. Hirsch, MD ; Paola Dal Cin, PhD
Acquired cystic disease-associated renal cell carcinoma
Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. 2021-07-09
