Abstract:
Introduction: In patients with malign renal tumors, inferior vena cava is involved in 4-10%, thus
representing a serious barrier for radical intervention.
Aim of study: The aim of this study is to analyze the results of surgical treatment of 18 patients (in 15
cases the right kidney was involved, in two cases the left and one case the only right kidney), with metastatic caval wall invasion, metastatic thrombus in the inferior vena cava, and metastasis of paracaval and
paraaortal lymph nodes.
Material and methods: The preoperative diagnosis was made using ultrasonnography, duplex scanning, CT angiography and angiography. Preoperative renal artery embolization was preferable. All patients underwent nefrectomy with retroperitoneal lymph nodes dissection. The reconstruction of the
inferior vena cava was made by several methods: removement of the metastatic thrombus with caval
suturing, resection of vena cava with grafting or patching. In 15 cases the tumoral caval wall invasion was
demonstrated by postoperative histology analysis.
Results: There has been one intraoperative lethal case in a patient that had a cardiopulmonary bypass system applied for removement of a metastatic thrombus that has reached the right atrium. The
cause of death was disseminated intravascular coagulation. In 15 cases the postoperative outcome was
satisfactory, without major complications. In one case the patient is dependent of hemodialysis.
Conclusion: The achieved results indicate that resection of the affected cava with its grafting is the
elective method for a more effective treatment of these tumors.