Objective: Robot-assisted laparoscopic partial
nephrectomy (RAPN) for completely endophytic renal
tumors is challenging because of the
tumor complexity. The
enucleation technique is an ideal resection method to maximally preserve the renal parenchyma. In the present study, we investigated the surgical outcomes of RAPN for completely endophytic renal
tumors and compared them between the enucleation and standard resection techniques. Methods: One hundred and forty-four patients who underwent RAPN for completely endophytic
tumors were the subjects of this study. The subjects were divided into two groups according to the Surface-Intermediate-Base margin score (SIB score): the enucleation group (SIB score 0-2) and the standard resection group (SIB score 3-5). To minimize selection bias between the two surgical methods, patient variables such as age, sex, body mass index, American Society of Anesthesiologists score,
tumor size, RENAL nephrometry score (RENAL NS), and preoperative renal function were adjusted using 1:1 propensity score matching. Results: Of the 144 patients, 72 were assigned to the enucleation group and 72 to the standard resection group. After matching, 45 patients were included in each group. The mean
tumor size was 26-27 mm and the mean RENAL NS was 9.0-9.1, after matching. The enucleation group showed significantly better preservation of the estimated glomerular filtration rate in the early postoperative period (-4.9% vs -16%, p = 0.0005) and at 6-12 months after surgery (-4.9% vs -9.2%, p = 0.0327) than the standard resection group. In addition, a shorter operation time (140 vs 167 minutes, p = 0.0028) was observed in the enucleation group. Other outcomes, including estimated blood loss,
positive surgical margin rate, incidence rate of complications, and length of
hospital stay, were not significantly different between the two groups. Conclusion: The
enucleation technique showed better surgical outcomes for completely endophytic renal
tumors in terms of preservation of renal function and operation time than the standard resection technique.