A case of schwannoma in kidney
A 66-year-old man presented with half a month of intermittent painless gross hematuria. Physical examination was unremarkable, but the contrast-enhanced computed tomographic images revealed a solid lesion protruded into the renal sinus at the lower pole of the left kidney (Figure 1). The mass was assumed to be a renal cell carcinoma and the patient underwent a left radical nephrectomy. Gross specimen showed a 2.7 cm × 2.5 cm × 2.0 cm mass centered in the renal parenchyma with a brown to yellow colored interior (Figure 2). Under microscopic examination the lesion revealed spindle cells arranged in palisading fashion (Antoni A) and loose textured pattern (Antoni B) (Figure 3). The tumor cells showed immunoreactivity for S100 protein and NSE (neuron specific enolase), the positivity of cell proliferation marker Ki67 was less than 1%. These findings confirmed a diagnosis of renal schwannoma. The patient was discharged in the 5th postoperative day with no complications and he remained free from recurrence after 6 months of clinical observation. The majority of schwannomas are benign. Although it rarely arises in the kidney, it should be considered in the differential diagnosis with other renal tumors, which may prevent unnecessary radical nephrectomy.
Acknowledgements
Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest.