Abstract
We studied nine ossifying renal tumors of infancy (ORTI), including all five previously reported cases. There were eight boys and one girl ranging in age from 6 days to 14 months. Cross hematuria was the presenting sign in all nine patients. Eight tumors arose in the left kidney and six in the upper pole. All seven patients with follow-up information were free of recurrence. All lesions were attached to a renal papilla and presented mainly within the calyceal lumen. Two resembled staghorn calculiclinically. All tumors contained varying proportions of osteoid, osteoblastic cells, and spindle cells. The spindle cell component had features strongly suggesting that they represented hyperplastic intralobar nephrogenic rests (ILNR). The proportion of osteoid and degree of osseous maturation increased with increasing age of the patient. ORTI is a distinctive clinicopathologic entity, possibly representing a distinctive interaction between ILNR in the renal papilla with distal collecting duct or urothelial cells in the developing kidney.