Comparison of Renal Anastomosing Hemangiomas in End-Stage and Non-End-Stage Kidneys: A Meta-Analysis With a Report of 2 Cases
Tarih
2017Yazar
Bakir, Baris
Ozluk, Yasemin
Bayram, Aysel
Ozcan, Faruk
Berker, Neslihan Kayisoglu
Caliskan, Yasar
Tas, Serap
Kilicaslan, Isin
Üst veri
Tüm öğe kaydını gösterÖzet
Background. Renal anastomosing hemangioma (RAH) is a very rare distinct entity composed of anastomosing sinusoidal (spleen-like) capillary-sized vessels lined by flat or hobnail endothelial cells. Most of the published cases of RAH occurred in the setting of end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Methods. We present 2 cases of RAH in ESRD along with a literature review. We compared clinicopathologic features of RAHs in end-stage and non-end-stage kidneys. A meta-analysis was conducted with PubMed and a manual search through references of relevant publications. Individual patient data gathered from the literature were used in the analysis. Results. Our systematic review revealed 49 RAHs, including our 2 cases. Thirty-two (65.3%) cases were in ESRD, only 17 (34.7%) were in patients with non-ESRD. RAHs in ESRD were in younger patients, smaller in size, multifocal, and seen more with renal epithelial neoplasms when compared with RAHs in non-ESRD (P < .05). Extramedullary hematopoiesis was seen mostly in RAHs in ESRD kidneys (85% vs 41.7%) (P = .018). Follow-up data were available for 25 cases with a mean follow-up of 24.58 +/- 38.54 months. Recurrence, metastasis, or death have never been described related to RAH in any patients. Conclusions. In conclusion, RAHs are rare and mostly arise in kidneys with end-stage damage. RAHs in ESRD and non-ESRD differ in terms of clinicopathologic features.
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