Renal oncocytoma
A renal oncocytoma is a benign neoplasm of the kidney made up of oncocytes, epithelial cells with an excess amount of mitochondria.
Signs and symptoms
Renal oncocytomas are often asymptomatic and are frequently discovered by chance on a CT or ultrasound of the abdomen. Possible signs and symptoms of a renal oncocytoma include blood in the urine, flank pain, and an abdominal mass.Pathophysiology
Renal oncocytoma is thought to arise from the intercalated cells of collecting ducts of the kidney. It represent 5% to 15% of surgically resected renal neoplasms. Ultrastructurally, the eosinophilic cells have numerous mitochondria.Histologic appearance
An oncocytoma is an epithelial tumor composed of oncocytes, large eosinophilic cells having small, round, benign-appearing nuclei with large nucleoli and excessive amounts of mitochondria.Diagnosis
In gross appearance, the tumors are tan or mahogany brown, well circumscribed and contain a central scar. They may achieve a large size.The main differential diagnosis of renal oncocytoma is chromophobe renal cell carcinoma oncocytic variant, which like the renal oncocytoma has eosinophilic cytoplasm, but has perinuclear clearing and some degree of nuclear atypia.
Immunohistochemical profile
- Cytokeratin AE1/AE3 +
- Vimentin -
- EMA +
- CD10+/-
- CK7 +/- parcellaire
- CK20 -
- CK19 -
- AMACR -
- S100 +
- c-kit +
- Cadherin-E +
- TFE3 -
- CAM5.2 +