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Data from the American Cancer Society shows a 70% increase in incidence of kidney and renal pelvis cancer between 2000 and 2010. This increase is attributed to small renal masses (SRM) that are incidentally discovered by abdominal radiological imaging. However, 30% of resected SRMs appear benign on histological examination. Conventional biopsy is currently used to provide pathological information prior to resection. However, its non-diagnostic value is high, up to 33% in SRMs, showing the need for diagnostic improvement.
The investigators have shown that optical biopsy (OB) can differentiate malignant from benign tissue and tumor subtypes. However, translation to the clinic requires a phase 2 clinical study. The investigators will use an OB probe that can be combined with a needle puncture during classical biopsy procedures, additionally providing real time micro-scale images containing quantitative information about tissue properties. The investigators are convinced that OB will greatly improve the diagnosis of renal tumor pathology.
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Rationale:
Renal biopsies can be used in patients with renal mass lesions to diagnose whether it concerns a malignant or benign mass. In case of malignancy, surgery will be the following step. However, 7 to 33% of biopsies are non-diagnostic, what can result in unnecessary surgery (even up to 30% in small renal masses). The investigators think that optical biopsy (OB), a new diagnostic tool based on the absorption en reflection of light in tissues, reduces the non-diagnostic biopsy rate. This could have a direct impact on the quality of life of the patients that are therefore scheduled for an unnecessary surgical procedure. Also, concerns about overtreatment have led to the concept of focal therapy, a selective patient tailored nephron sparing surgical or ablation technique of a lesion, reducing lifetime morbidity and side effects without compromising life expectancy. For this novel form of treatment, accurate identification, grading and demarcation of a lesion is crucial and OB is the ideal platform to provide this approach to an improved cure.
Objectives:
Primary
Secondary
Study design:
This is a prospective, observational, multi-centre in-vivo study.
Study population:
Patients ≥ 18 years of age, with a solid enhancing renal mass suspected for renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and candidates for active (surgical) treatment of the renal mass.
Intervention:
Patients will receive an ultrasound guided percutaneous OB followed by a Core biopsy (CB) during the same procedure. The planned institutional surgical protocol will be followed irrespective of the results of OB and CB. During surgery (radical/partial, open/laparoscopic, percutaneous ablation) a new set of DRS and OCT measurements of the tumor and normal tissue will be performed.
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194 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
MP Laguna Pes, MD. PhD.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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