One third of individuals aged \>60 years will be diagnosed with at least one renal cyst following abdominal imaging. These cystic lesions are categorized according to the Bosniak classification which categorizes cysts according to their degree of complexity and risk of malignancy. Growing evidence suggests that a significant proportion of Bosniak III and IV cysts are benign and that the malignant ones present low metastatic potential. Since renal surgery carries substantial morbidity (20%) and potential mortality (0.5%), active surveillance has gained attention as a potential tradeoff to surgery to overcome overtreatment. Therefore, prospective studies of long-term follow-up are needed to confirm the oncologic outcomes of this strategy for Bosniak III/IV cysts. We first designed a pilot study that will assess the feasibility of a subsequent larger multicenter observational study aiming to ascertain mid-term safety of active surveillance. The objectives of this pilot study are a) Determining patients and urologists buy-in and barriers to the proposed intervention; b) Collecting perceptions and concerns of patients and urologists; c)
STUDY DESIGN - This is a two-arm multicenter prospective observational pilot study where patients with Bosniak III or IV choosing either active surveillance or surgery will be monitored closely. OBJECTIVES - PRIMARY Validate the feasibility issues (acceptability, recruitment rate, costs, protocol adherence and implementation of imaging central review) of an observational study on the treatments of complex cysts. SECONDARY a- Validate the inclusion and exclusion criteria in regard to the feasibility of the study; b- Validate the triggers for discontinuation of AS in terms of feasibility and safety for the patients. POPULATION - For the pilot study, the intended targeted population will be patients incidentally diagnosed with a Bosniak III or IV cysts and who opted to be managed by either surgery or active surveillance. METHODOLOGY - Upon written consent, patients will be explained the followup scheme which will consist of a semi-annual visits for 1 year. To mimic the upcoming larger study and to evaluate visit feasibility issues, the baseline and the follow-up visits will consist of the following items: blood results, CT-scan result, quality of life questionnaires and medical data. Baseline (prior to study entry) and follow-up abdominal imaging (CT/MRI) suspicious for progression will be reviewed centrally by an interventional radiologist at the CIUSSSE-CHUS, to confirm Bosniak classification.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
24
St Joseph's Healthcare
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Princess Margaret Cancer Center
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Centre de recherche du Centre hospitalier Universitaire de Sherbrooke
Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada
Acceptability
defined by the number of patients that accept to be enrolled over the number of patients that were screened eligible
Time frame: at baseline (at enrollment, no longer than 6 months after diagnosis)
recruitment rate
defined by the number of patients that actually were enrolled per month per participating site
Time frame: at baseline (at enrollment, no longer than 6 months after diagnosis)
study costs
defined by costs for research resources involved per patient per participating site
Time frame: at the end of study (1 year after enrollment/signature of consent)
study compliance
defined by the percentage of total deviations (missing data, missing visits or visits out of timeframe)
Time frame: at the end of study (1 year after enrollment/signature of consent)
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