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AJR 2005; 184:1597-1599
© American Roentgen Ray Society


Case Report

Nonneoplastic Hyperdense Enhancing Renal Mass: CT Findings and Pathologic Correlation

David J. Choi1, Sridhar Shankar1, Dariusz Stachurski2 and Barbara F. Banner2

1 Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts Medical Health Center, Worcester, MA 01532.
2 Department of Pathology, University of Massachusetts Medical Health Center, Worcester, MA 01532.

Received January 1, 2004; accepted after revision August 12, 2004.

 
Address correspondence to Sridhar Shankar.


Introduction
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
Renal masses most commonly appear hypo- to isodense on unenhanced CT, and enhancement after IV contrast administration typically prompts either close follow-up or a pathologic diagnosis to exclude malignancy [1]. Hyperattenuating renal masses have been found to be hyperdense cysts [2, 3], neoplasms [2, 3], and angiomyolipomas with minimal fat [4]. Enhancement of a hyperattenuating mass excludes the diagnosis of a cyst. We describe, for the first time to our knowledge, hyperdense, enhancing renal masses that represented the end-stage changes of focal chronic tubulointerstitial inflammation.


Case Report
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
A 41-year-old Brazilian man presented to the emergency department with right flank pain. Physical examination revealed no fever or costovertebral angle tenderness. Peripheral WBC count was 11 x 109 cells/L, and the serum creatinine level was 1.4 mg/dL. Urinalysis showed 200 RBCs and 2 WBCs per high-power field. Urine culture revealed no growth.

CT scans (5-mm slice thickness) of the abdomen and pelvis were obtained on an 8-MDCT scanner (LightSpeed Ultra, GE Healthcare) both before and after IV contrast administration (iopamidol [Isovue-370, Bracco Diagnostics]). These images showed two hyperattenuating lesions in the right renal parenchyma: the first measuring 5.0 x 2.7 x 3.5 cm in the lower pole (Figs. 1A, 1B, 1C, 1D) and a second similar mass measuring 3.5 x 1.8 x 3.0 cm in the interpolar region. Several foci of lower attenuation, measuring 5 mm or less in diameter, were noted in the hyperdense lesions. A 4-mm calculus was seen in a nondilated right renal collecting system.



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Fig. 1A. 41-year-old man with right flank pain. Unenhanced CT images show hyperattenuating masses in interpolar region (A) and lower pole (B) of right kidney.

 


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Fig. 1B. 41-year-old man with right flank pain. Unenhanced CT images show hyperattenuating masses in interpolar region (A) and lower pole (B) of right kidney.

 


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Fig. 1C. 41-year-old man with right flank pain. CT images obtained 70 sec after IV contrast administration show enhancement of masses in interpolar region (C) and lower pole (D) of right kidney. Subcentimeter foci of lower attenuation are marked by arrows.

 


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Fig. 1D. 41-year-old man with right flank pain. CT images obtained 70 sec after IV contrast administration show enhancement of masses in interpolar region (C) and lower pole (D) of right kidney. Subcentimeter foci of lower attenuation are marked by arrows.

 

The masses enhanced from approximately 75 H before IV contrast administration to 130 H at 70 sec after IV contrast administration. No contrast washout was noted at approximately 5 min after contrast injection. Because the foci of lower attenuation measured no greater in size than the slice collimation, reliable determination of their enhancement behavior was not possible. The left kidney appeared unremarkable.

Approximately 1 year before presentation, the patient experienced a similar episode of right flank pain that prompted an unenhanced CT examination of the abdomen and pelvis at an outside institution. Those images showed a similar appearance of the two masses. Three nonobstructing calculi measuring up to 5 mm in diameter were noted in the right renal collecting system at that time.

Because the diagnosis of renal cell carcinoma could not be excluded, the patient underwent right nephrectomy 2 weeks after the more recent CT scans were obtained. A section of the gross specimen revealed a well-circumscribed, firm, smooth, solid, yellow–pink mass in the lower pole containing multiple 1- to 2-mm cysts filled with clear watery fluid. The mass involved the cortex and calyx and extended to the capsule, but it did not penetrate the capsule or invade perirenal fat. A second similar finely granular mass was present in the interpolar region, and it also contained multiple fluid-filled cysts, the largest measuring 5 mm. No necrosis or hemorrhage was seen. The remainder of the cortex was red–brown with a well-defined corticomedullary junction.

Microscopically, the masses comprised atrophic and cystically dilated tubules, sclerotic glomeruli, and dystrophic calcifications enmeshed in a sclerotic stroma (Figs. 1E and 1F). Trichrome staining of histologic sections confirmed the presence of extensive background fibrosis amid the tubules with cystic dilatation. A periodic-acid Schiff stain highlighted residual atrophic and focally sclerotic glomeruli with intact Bowman's membranes. These findings were consistent with the end-stage changes of focal chronic tubulointerstitial inflammation and were not neoplastic in nature.



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Fig. 1E. 41-year-old man with right flank pain. Photomicrograph of histologic section from mass in right renal lower pole mass (left upper portion of image) shows that it is well circumscribed by pseudocapsule and bordered by normal renal cortex (right lower portion of image). Dystrophic microcalcifications (arrows) are visible. Sections from the right renal interpolar mass (not shown) were similar in appearance. (H and E, x4)

 


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Fig. 1F. 41-year-old man with right flank pain. Photomicrograph of histologic section from mass in right renal lower pole shows atrophic tubules with cystic dilatation (arrowhead). Sections from the right renal interpolar mass (not shown) were similar in appearance. (H and E, x40)

 


Discussion
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
The differential diagnosis for hyperattenuating renal masses includes hyperdense cysts [2, 3], neoplasms [2, 3], and angiomyolipomas with minimal fat [4]. Findings such as internal enhancement and heterogeneity, size [5], and deenhancement [6] have been proposed to increase the diagnostic likelihood of neoplasm over hyperdense cyst. Such factors, however, cannot be used to distinguish between benign and malignant neoplasms—for example, oncocytoma and renal cell carcinoma. Macroscopic fat is one of a few CT criteria that is widely accepted as increasing the likelihood of a benign diagnosis, such as angiomyolipoma, for an enhancing renal mass [7]. Sonography and MRI also may be useful in decisions between close follow-up and histologic evaluation of such lesions [1, 3].

The lesions described in our report most closely resemble the changes seen during the end stages of chronic tubulointerstitial inflammation, which is a nonspecific response to persistent tubular injury. As a result of this injury, tubules may become atrophic, simplified, dilated, and filled with a concentrated proteinaceous fluid. The low-attenuation subcentimeter foci within the renal masses seen on CT may have represented cystic dilatation of tubules. A whole field of such tubules resembles thyroid tissue in microscopic sections and is referred to as "thyroidization." The fact that the changes were so localized in this case suggests that the instigating inflammatory process involved only some of the lobes or calices. Chronic calyceal obstruction is the most likely cause for the lesions in the current case. An expert in the pathology of renal masses at an outside institution, John Eble at the Indiana University School of Medicine, concurred with this interpretation. He noted that the changes were consistent with the "upstream results of obstruction of the ducts of Bellini in the renal papillae by calcifications, such as Randall's plaque" (Eble JN, personal communication).

In the setting of focal obstruction, superimposed infection, as in focal xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis, may have been active in the distant past. Although lipid-laden macrophages are present by definition in this disease, they would not be expected long after the inflammation had resolved. Active lesions of focal xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis typically surround an obstructed calyx and usually appear hypodense and enlarged on CT [8]. Although RBCs and WBCs were found in the patient's urine, the nephrectomy specimen, which was obtained 4 weeks after the patient's latest presentation, did not show any signs of recent infection on histopathologic examination. Neutrophil and mononuclear cell counts in the renal lesions were normal. Selli et al. [9] described a case of focal xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis that contained macroscopic bone metaplasia. In contrast, the dystrophic calcifications described in our report were microscopic and lacked any semblance of osseous tissue.

This report is the first description, to our knowledge, of an unusual CT appearance of a recognized pathologic entity. We propose that an end-stage diffusely microcalcified renal lesion caused by focal chronic tubulointerstitial inflammation should be included in the differential diagnosis for a hyperdense enhancing renal mass. These atypical CT findings, however, are not pathognomonic for inflammatory lesions and cannot in themselves substitute for histologic evaluation.


Acknowledgments
 
We thank Rhonda Yantiss, MD and Alan J. Davidson, MD for their helpful comments.


References
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 

  1. Davidson AJ, Hartman DS, Choyke PL, Wagner BJ. Radiologic assessment of renal masses: implications for patient care. Radiology1997; 202:297 –305[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Coleman BG, Arger PH, Mintz MC, Pollack HM, Banner MP. Hyperdense renal masses: a computed tomographic dilemma. AJR1984; 143:291 –294[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  3. Hartman DS, Aronson S, Frazer H. Current status of imaging indeterminate renal masses. Radiol Clin North Am1991; 29:475 –496[Medline]
  4. Hosokawa Y, Kinouchi T, Sawai Y, et al. Renal angiomyolipoma with minimal fat. Int J Clin Oncol2002; 7:120 –123[Medline]
  5. Suh M, Coakley FV, Yeh BM, Breiman RS, Lu Y. Distinction of renal cell carcinomas from high-attenuation renal cysts at portal-venous phase contrast-enhanced CT. Radiology2003; 228:330 –334[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  6. Macari M, Bosniak MA. Delayed CT to evaluate renal masses incidentally discovered at contrast-enhanced CT: demonstration of vascularity with deenhancement. Radiology1999; 213:674 –680[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  7. Lesavre A, Correas J-M, Merran S, Grenier N, Vieillefond A, Helenon O. CT of papillary renal cell carcinomas with cholesterol necrosis mimicking angiomyolipomas. AJR2003; 181:143 –145[Free Full Text]
  8. Goldman SM, Hartman DS, Fishman EK, Finizio JP, Gatewood OMB, Siegelman SS. CT of xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis: radiologic–pathologic correlation. AJR1984; 142:963 –969[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  9. Selli C, De Antoni P, Moro U, Crisci A, Bartoletti R, Scott CA. Focal xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis with associated bone metaplasia. Urol Int 2000;64:36 –39[Medline]

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