Renal Cell Carcinomas in Ibadan; A Further Histopathological Study

Main Article Content

JI Nwadiokwu
OO Adegoke
MA Ajani
CA Okolo

Abstract

Background:Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is the most lethal


urological cancer accounting for about 2% of all cancer


deaths worldwide. It is relatively rare in Africans but


contributes to significant morbidity and mortality from


cancers of the urogenital tract. A previous study of RCC


in Ibadan is succeeded by this current review


Materials and Methods: The bio-data of all the patients


with histologically diagnosed renal cell carcinoma was


obtained from the surgical daybook of the Department of


Pathology, UCH, Ibadan within the study period (January


2007 to December 2016). H&E stained tissue slides of all


cases of renal cell carcinomas seen in the surgical daybook


were reviewed for confirmation of the histological diagnosis


of renal cell carcinoma. The morphological patterns and


Fuhrman grading were determined for all the cases of clear


cell and papillary renal cell carcinomas while a novel tumour


grading adapted for chromophobe renal cell carcinomas


was used to grade all 3 cases of Chromophobe RCC seen


in this study. Frequency statistics and chi-square were


applied on data to determine proportions and associations


using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS)


version 23.


Results: A total of 48 cases of renal cell carcinomas were


seen within the study period that met the inclusion criteria


for the study. Clear cell RCC was the commonest variant


and comprised 30 cases (62.5%) followed by 14 cases of


papillary RCC (29.17%) while 3 cases of Chromophobe


renal cell carcinoma was seen comprising 6.25%. Only one


unclassified variant was seen making up 2.08%. The age


range of the patients was between 3 to 76 years with an


average age of 44.17years. The male to female ratio was


1:1.3. Grade 2 nuclei were predominant (43.75%) while


Grade 4 nuclei had the lowest frequency (6.25%). The


association between the morphological patterns and the


nuclear grading was however not statistically significant.


Conclusion: This study demonstrated that the clear cell


variant of RCC was the commonest morphological pattern


seen in our environment with most of our cohort having


low grade nuclei which appears different from the findings


of the previous study but correlates well with the global


trends in RCC. The nuclear grading as prognostic mark


also appears favourable. A further study of the molecular


genetics of this cancer will help to determine whether this


cancer is mainly familial or sporad


er


 

Article Details

Section

Original Articles

References

Similar Articles

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)