Oncocytoma: A Differential Consideration for an Incidentally Detected FDG-Avid Renal Mass on PET/CT

Authors

  • Christopher John Smith
  • Mindy X Wang
  • Michael Feely
  • Brandon Otto
  • Joseph Rafael Grajo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3941/jrcr.v11i5.3117

Keywords:

Oncocytoma, PET/CT, Renal cell carcinoma, FDG-avid, Renal mass

Abstract

Renal oncocytoma is a benign renal neoplasm that is often discovered incidentally and closely mimics renal cell carcinoma on common imaging modalities such as computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Due to the inability to reliably distinguish between these benign and malignant lesions with imaging, both are typically treated as if they are malignant. Hypermetabolic activity of renal oncocytomas is not frequently encountered because positron emission tomography (PET) is not a standard modality for imaging primary renal tumors. We present a case of a 65 year-old female with a history of thyroid cancer who had an incidentally discovered hypermetabolic renal mass on surveillance PET-CT imaging. Due to the concern for a primary renal malignancy or metastatic disease, the mass was resected and proven to be an oncocytoma on pathologic review.

Author Biographies

Christopher John Smith

Department of Radiology

Michael Feely

Department of Pathology

Brandon Otto

Assistant Professor of Urology

Joseph Rafael Grajo

Assistant Professor of Radiology

Associate Chairman for Research

Director of Body MRI

Published

2017-05-27

Issue

Section

Genitourinary Radiology