Abstract
The role of surgery and adjuvant therapy in renal tumors with metastasis is considered purely palliative. However, in cases of solitary metastasis, an aggressive surgical approach is justified by results reported in current literature, in terms of survival rate and quality of life. In bone metastasis there are additional functional problems related to the site of the lesion and to the extend of the excision. In the reported case, the tumor became evident with a serious compressive cervical-mediastinal simptomatology, due to a solitary sternal metastasis, that was resected along with the primary renal tumor.
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