Abstract
Objectives
The purpose of this pictorial review is to present the imaging spectrum of renal oncocytomas with radiological-pathological correlation.
Conclusion
The differences in tumour cellularity (high cellularity or low cellularity with abundant stroma) and haemorrhagic/cystic change contribute to a wide spectrum of imaging findings of renal oncocytomas. Imaging findings substantially overlap those of common subtypes of clear cell and non-clear cell renal cell carcinomas. Multifocal renal oncocytomas are not rare, and making the diagnosis of oncocytoma with concomitant renal cell carcinoma is difficult. In addition, renal oncocytomas that demonstrate interval growth or develop in the setting of end-stage renal disease may be mistaken for malignancy.
Teaching Points
• High cellular components demonstrate avid arterial enhancement and subsequent washout.
• Low cellular components demonstrate gradual subsequent enhancement owing to abundant stroma.
• Cystic and hemorrhagic changes may account for lesion heterogeneity in the delayed phase.
• Multifocal oncocytomas and oncocytomas coexisting with renal cell carcinoma are not rare.
• Renal oncocytomas may demonstrate interval growth.
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Introduction
Renal oncocytoma is a benign renal tumour, accounting for approximately 3–7 % of all renal tumours [1]. Typical imaging findings of renal oncocytoma are described as a homogeneous hypervascular mass with subsequent washout in the delayed phase [2, 3] (Fig. 1). A central scar is a characteristic finding, especially in a large oncocytoma [4]. However, such classic imaging findings are not common [5]. In many cases, renal oncocytomas are surgically resected because preoperative imaging diagnosis is not reliable to distinguish oncocytoma from renal cell carcinoma (RCC).
Kim et al. [6] found that segmental enhancement inversion based on the corticomedullary and early excretory phase was a characteristic enhancement pattern of oncocytoma (Fig. 2). Segmental enhancement inversion is a term defined as a renal lesion that has two distinct zones of enhancement which show inverse patterns between the corticomedullary (30–40 s) and early excretory (120–180 s) phases. One zone is hyper-enhancing on the corticomedullary phase, which subsequently becomes hypo-enhancing on the early excretory phase. The other zone is hypo-enhancing on the corticomedullary phase and becomes hyper-enhancing on the early excretory phase [6, 7]. However, other studies have found it controversial whether or not segmental enhancement inversion is characteristic for oncocytoma [7–10]. Additionally, several studies examining the discrimination of RCC from oncocytoma based on the corticomedullary phase have shown inconsistent results [2, 11–13].
Therefore, renal oncocytomas demonstrate various imaging findings. Not only may the discrimination of oncocytoma from RCC be challenging, but also the presence of oncocytoma with concurrent RCC may be a diagnostic problem. Although imaging findings may not reliably discriminate oncocytoma from RCC, it is meaningful for radiologists to understand the wide imaging spectrum of oncocytomas when approaching the differential diagnosis of renal tumours.
The purpose of this pictorial review is to present the imaging spectrum of renal oncocytomas. To aid in understanding the imaging findings of oncocytomas, radiological-pathological correlations are provided.
The diagnostic difficulties of discriminating renal oncocytoma from renal cell carcinoma
Several studies examining the discrimination of clear cell RCC from oncocytoma based on arterial enhancement have revealed inconsistent results. For example, Gakis et al. [2] and Bird et al. [11] described that oncocytomas demonstrated greater enhancement than clear cell RCC in the corticomedullary phase. On the other hand, Young et al. [12] described that clear cell RCC demonstrated greater enhancement than oncocytoma. Pierorazio et al. [13] described that peak enhancement of clear cell RCC was seen predominantly in the corticomedullary phase, while that of oncocytoma was seen predominantly in the nephrographic phase (Fig. 3). Zhang et al. [14] described that oncocytoma commonly showed avid enhancement in the venous phase. Furthermore, oncocytoma may present as a hypovascular mass with gradual contrast enhancement (Fig. 4) or a persistently hypovascular or cystic mass (Figs. 5 and 6). Therefore, in oncocytoma, the degree of tumoural enhancement and the timing of peak enhancement are variable.
Kim et al. [6] found that segmental enhancement inversion based on the corticomedullary and early excretory phases was a characteristic enhancement pattern of a relatively small (<4 cm) oncocytoma. In contrast, Millet et al. [8] did not find segmental enhancement inversion in oncocytoma or RCC, and O’Malley et al. [9] concluded that segmental enhancement inversion was not a common or characteristic finding for oncocytoma. Additionally, the enhancement pattern of RCC (clear cell RCC or chromophobe RCC) may mimic segmental enhancement inversion [15, 16] (Fig. 7).
McGahan et al. [10] described that the most common feature of oncocytoma (<4 cm) was a heterogeneous enhancing mass that became homogeneous on the delayed phase (Figs. 2 and 3). Woo et al. [17] described that when segmental enhancement inversion was inconspicuous in the early excretory phase, oncocytomas might appear nearly homogeneous, especially in the case of small oncocytomas. However, similar finding may be seen in RCC (Fig. 8). Therefore, a characteristic enhancement pattern for renal oncocytomas has not been widely accepted.
Vascularity and enhancement patterns of oncocytomas are various, and oncocytomas can present as an either homogeneous or heterogeneous mass. Such a wide spectrum of imaging findings substantially overlaps those of common subtypes of RCCs. When an oncocytoma presents as a heterogeneous hypervascular mass, it may mimic clear cell RCC [14]. When an oncocytoma presents as a homogeneous hypovascular mass, it may mimic chromophobe or papillary RCCs on CT (Fig. 9).
Radiological-pathological correlation of renal oncocytoma
Imaging findings and pathological correlations are summarised in Table 1.
There are three cellular patterns of renal oncocytomas, including organoid (Figs. 1d and 3e), tubulocystic and mixed pattern [4]. The organoid pattern is characterised by nests of tumour cells surrounded by a reticular framework of thin blood vessels and stroma [4]. The tumour nests can be tightly packed (high cellularity) or loosely arranged within an oedematous stroma (low cellularity) [4]. The tubulocystic pattern (Fig. 6b) is characterised by tumour cells arranged as tubular and cystic structures separated within an oedematous stroma (low cellularity) [4].
Abundant vascularity in the organoid pattern may account for the arterial enhancement of oncocytomas. In the organoid pattern, tightly packed tumour nests may explain washout patterns in the venous phase owing to its high cellularity. For example, if an oncocytoma predominantly consists of tightly packed tumour nests, the tumour would show avid arterial enhancement and subsequent washout in the nephrographic phase (Fig. 1). On the other hand, the presence of abundant stroma (low cellularity) may explain slow or gradual enhancement. If an oncocytoma contains abundant stroma, the tumour would present as a hypovascular mass or gradually enhancing lesion (Fig. 4). If an oncocytoma consists of two distinct components of high and low cellularity, the tumour may demonstrate segmental enhancement inversion (Fig. 2). In fact, Kim et al. [6] described that early-enhancing and delayed-enhancing components in oncocytomas (segmental enhancement inversion) reflected areas of compactly arranged tumour cells (high cellularity) and abundant stroma, respectively.
The difference in the cellularity (and stroma) may influence the degree of tumour enhancement and characteristic enhancement pattern of individual oncocytomas.
The prevalence of cystic change and haemorrhage in renal oncocytomas ranges from 5 % to 20 % [1, 18, 19]. Haemorrhage and cystic change may alter the imaging findings of oncocytomas to present as a heterogeneous mass, especially in a larger tumour [17] (Figs. 10 and 11). In addition, partial haemorrhage and cystic change may account for lesion heterogeneity in the delayed phase, demonstrating a focal non-enhancing area within the tumour.
When cystic changes and haemorrhage are extensive, oncocytomas may present as a hypovascular mass (Fig. 5). Oncocytomas may present as a multilocular cystic mass [20] (Fig. 6). In addition, a rare variant of telangiectatic oncocytoma has been reported, which is histologically characterised by a predominance of multicystic spaces filled with blood products [21].
Magnetic resonance imaging findings
On magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), the high cellular component demonstrates moderate signal on T2-weighted images and relatively high signal on diffusion-weighted imaging (Figs. 1 and 10). High T2 signal within the tumour may reflect oedematous stroma, central scar or cystic change. Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI findings are similar to CT; the components of high cellularity demonstrate arterial enhancement and the component of high T2 signal shows gradual enhancement with partial or complete fill-in [3] (Fig. 10). It has been reported that apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCs) of oncocytomas were significantly higher than that of RCC [22]. However, it is questionable whether diffusion-weighted imaging is useful in the differential diagnosis of oncocytoma versus RCC due to the variability of oncocytoma cellularity.
Other uncommon imaging manifestations
Calcification
Although the pathological literature describes calcification in 31 % of oncocytomas [1], calcification is relatively uncommon on CT. Calcification is typically present within the central scar [1, 5] (Fig. 12).
Multifocal oncocytoma
Oncocytomas are multifocal in 2.5–16 % of cases and bilateral in 4–12 % [23]. Multifocal oncocytomas (Figs. 10 and 11) can be either sporadic or associated with Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome. Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome is a rare autosomal dominant disease that is characterised by cutaneous hair follicle tumours and multiple renal tumours including RCC and oncocytoma. Renal and pulmonary cysts are also associated with the syndrome [24] (Fig. 13). The presence of pulmonary cysts helps to discriminate Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome from von-Hippel Lindau disease [24]. Renal oncocytosis (multiple oncocytic lesions) is a recently established disease entity defined as diffuse replacement of the renal parenchyma by numerous oncocytic tumours, such as hybrid tumours, chromophobe RCCs, renal oncocytomas, and oncocytic renal parenchyma [25]. Renal oncocytosis may occur sporadically or may be associated with chronic renal failure and long-term haemodialysis [25].
Oncocytoma coexisting with renal cell carcinoma
Coexisting RCC is not rare in patients with oncocytoma, and the reported incidence is up to 10 % [26]. Coexisting RCC may present as an incidental microscopic finding sometimes associated with oncocytoma (hybrid tumour) (Fig. 14) or as a separate mass in the ipsilateral or contralateral kidney [27] (Fig. 11).
Renal oncocytomas and chromophobe RCC may be related entities (oncocytic lesions). These two tumours may arise from a common precursor with the potential to differentiate into either a benign (oncocytoma) or malignant (chromophobe RCC) lesion [23, 24]. Hybrid tumours consisting of oncocytoma and chromophobe RCC components have been described [25, 28]. The lesion heterogeneity on imaging does not indicate the presence of chromophobe RCC and imaging findings are not helpful for making the diagnosis of a hybrid tumour (Fig. 14). In addition, even though metastatic oncocytomas have been reported, they may potentially be chromophobe RCCs misdiagnosed as oncocytomas [4, 29, 30].
Findings that may be mistaken for malignancy
Interval growth
Oncocytomas may demonstrate slow interval growth (Fig. 15). Slight interval growth does not indicate malignancy and the growth rate is not helpful in discriminating RCC from oncocytoma because the growth rate of RCC is variable. The reported mean growth rate of clear cell RCC (0.7 cm/year) is not significantly different from that of oncocytomas (0.5 cm/year) [31].
Extension to the perinephric fat
The extension to the perinephric fat is considered atypical for oncocytoma [4, 29] (Fig. 16) and the clinical significance of this imaging finding is uncertain. While radiologically evident infiltrative growth indicates malignancy, oncocytomas typically present as a well-circumscribed or lobulated mass and associated perinephric fat extension is typically radiologically subtle (Fig. 16).
Oncocytoma arising in end-stage renal disease
Oncocytomas rarely develop in patients on haemodialysis [32] (Fig. 17). However, oncocytosis (multiple oncocytic lesions) may be associated with chronic renal failure and long-standing haemodialysis [33]. Because the pre-operative diagnosis of oncocytoma is difficult and the association between renal cell carcinoma and long standing dialysis is well-known, surgical treatment is warranted if the tumour is resectable [32].
Conclusions
The wide spectrum of imaging findings regarding renal oncocytomas may be explained by the differences in the variable mixture of high-cellularity and low-cellularity components. High cellularity may explain intense arterial enhancement and subsequent washout. Low cellularity with abundant stroma may explain a lesser degree of arterial enhancement and gradual subsequent enhancement. Cystic change and haemorrhage may also contribute to lesion heterogeneity and the lesser degree of arterial enhancement.
The presence of segmental enhancement inversion may be suggestive of renal oncocytoma, although it can be seen in RCC. Oncocytomas tend to become homogeneous in the delayed phase. However, it may be more practical to consider that a heterogeneous mass in the delayed phase is more likely RCC because it is more common than oncocytoma. When the imaging findings are suspicious for oncocytoma, it is still necessary to perform biopsy because imaging findings of RCC and oncocytoma overlap. Additionally, biopsy may mischaracterise an RCC as an oncocytoma, and some oncocytomas may contain RCC components (hybrid tumour). Therefore, even though a biopsy specimen is suggestive of oncocytoma, careful imaging follow-up or less invasive therapeutic options such as nephron-sparing surgery, cryoablation or radiofrequency ablation may be indicated.
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Ishigami, K., Jones, A.R., Dahmoush, L. et al. Imaging spectrum of renal oncocytomas: a pictorial review with pathologic correlation. Insights Imaging 6, 53–64 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13244-014-0373-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13244-014-0373-x