The WT treatment is implemented with two distinctive methods: The Europe"s International Society of Pediatric Oncology (SIOP) method which adopts the principle of initiating chemotherapy (CT) without tissue diagnosis and then surgical application and North America"s National Wilms Tumor Study (NWTS), now known as the Children"s Oncology Group method (COG) which carries out a treatment plan with tissue diagnosis. Primarly providing CT contributes to preventation of phase escalation due to tumor cells being shed during surgery and surgical complications that may occur in the presence of large-sized or thrombus but besides that has a disadvantage of providing unnecessary CT to the cases diagnosed histopathologically other than WT. In NWTS/COG method, although tissue diagnosis is the main criterion, the principle of providing CT first is adopted in very large tumors, bilateral cases and the presence of thrombus extending into the IVC or atrium. However, the most important factor determining the prognosis in both methods is the phase of tumor, whether it contains anaplasia and the positivity of biological indicators such as 1p, 16q LOH veya 11p15q LOH [2,3,5].
Surgery is one of the key factors in WT treatment. Transperitoneal radical nephrectomy is standard operation for unilateral WTs. Nephron sparing surgery is suggested to be implemented in selected patient cases with single kidneys or bilateral WT. In this case report, a patient who diagnosed with Wilms tumor in right kidney at the age of 4 and underwent partial nephrectomy which is rarely implemented or suggested to be implemented in selected cases is represented.
Figure 3: View of the kidney that underwent partial nephrectomy at the last check-up
Transperitoneal radical nephrectomy is standard operation for unilateral WTs. Nephron sparing surgery is suggested only in selected patient cases with single kidney or bilateral WT [7]. It is discussed in unilateral cases whether it should be implemented by partial nephrectomy or enucleaction [8,9]. This approach is suggested only in synchronous or metachronous bilateral cases or single kidneys. Only less than 5% of unilateral WTs are appropriate for partial nephrectomy because most of the kidneys are locally progressed during diagnosis [8,10]. For partial resection surgical criteria are as follows: tumor is placed in a single pole and infiltrated less than 1/3 of the kidney; there is no renal vein invasion, surgeon has experience in pediatric oncology [8,11]. We think that our case will contribute to literature in a way that it is a case presentation diagnosed with Wilms tumor in the right kidney and underwent partial nephrectomy that is rarely implemented or suggested to implemented in selected cases.
Ethics Committee Approval: N / A.
Informed Consent: An informed consent was obtained from the patient"s parents.
Publication: The results of the study were not published in full or in part in form of abstracts.
Peer-review: Externally peer-reviewed.
Authorship Contributions: Any contribution was not made by any individual not listed as an author. Concept – K.Y.; Design – K.Y.; Supervision – K.Y.; Resources – K.Y.; Materials – K.Y.; Data Collection and/or Processing – K.Y.; Analysis and/ or Interpretation – K.Y.; Literature Search – K.Y.; Writing Manuscript – K.Y.; Critical Review – K.Y.
Conflict of Interest: The author declares that there was no conflict of interest.
Financial Disclosure: The author declares that this study received no financial support.
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