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The role of biopsy

The role and indications for biopsy of a renal mass is controversial.

The aim of biopsy is to determine:

  • Benign vs malignant
  • Morphology – RCC or other
  • Grade of RCC if able

Accepted and well-defined indications for biopsy:

  • Indeterminate lesion suspected to not be RCC – i.e. metastasis, lymphoma, infective
  • Prior to systemic treatment for RCC

Relative indications include:

  • Bilateral renal masses
  • Prior to focal therapy

Evolving or elective indications may include:

  • Avoiding surgery in patients with benign tumours (accepting the issues associated with biopsy)
    • Younger women are at higher risk of having a benign tumour
  • EAU – “perform biopsy in select patients who are considering active surveillance”

Biopsy is not necessary in patients fit and willing for surgical treatment with a solid enhancing mass that looks like RCC.

Biopsy is not recommended for:

  • Patients unfit or unwilling to undergo curative intent treatment
  • Cystic masses

 

Regarding biopsy technique:

  • Done under ultrasound or CT guidance
  • Multiple passes with a 16 and 18 G core biopsy needle (better yield than FNA)
  • Co-axial technique recommended (to reduce potential risk of seeding)

 

Potential morbidity:

  • Bleeding – 5 % haematoma, 1 % transfusion
  • Pain
  • Pneumothorax
  • Non diagnostic
  • Tumour seeding – very rare – mostly reported prior to co-axial technique

 

 

Accuracy of renal biopsy:

  • Non diagnostic in roughly 14 % of cases (a repeat biopsy is usually sufficient)
  • Can be very difficult (some say impossible) to distinguish between oncocytoma and chromophobe RCC (esp eosinophilic variant)
  • Difficult to assign grade – biopsied tissue may not be representative – often just graded as high or low – poor predictive value for high grade malignancy
  • Positive predictive value > 99 % for malignancy
  • Negative predictive value 63 – 80 % – therefore reasonably high rate of false negatives – usually chromophobe RCC / oncocytoma or sampling error