Research Article

The Unlikely Duo: Gross Hematuria and Clubbing Revealing Hidden Malignancy

Authors

  • Abdelrahman Idris Mohamed Idris First Author, Kassala Teaching Hospital.
  • Basimathul Ain Mohamed Saleem Second Author, KAP Viswanatham Government Medical College.
  • Areej Ahmed Abdalla Hassan Third Author, Hamad Medical Corporation.
  • Abeer Ebrahim Mohamed Salmaniya Medical Complex.
  • Fatema Abbas Jahromi Sultan Qaboos University Hospital.
  • Zainab Yusuf Yaqoob Sultan Qaboos University Hospital.
  • Rehma Yousuf Jilin University.
  • Fatema Hani Abdulla Hasan Mansoura University, Faculty of Medicine.
  • Sayed Fadhel Hashem Neama Mansoura University, Faculty of Medicine.
  • Saffaa Ahmed Hersi Ain Shams University, Faculty of Medicine.
  • Zainab Habib ALQallaf Mansoura University, Faculty of Medicine.
  • Shatha Adel Sarhan Royal College of Surgeons in Irland, Bahrain.

Abstract

A previously healthy 47-year-old Saudi male presented with a two-month history of painless gross hematuria and notable digital clubbing. The hematuria was intermittent, dark red, and unassociated with dysuria, flank pain, or systemic symptoms. Physical examination confirmed clubbing of the fingers, while vital signs and general assessment were unremarkable. Laboratory evaluation revealed mild polycythemia and borderline hypercalcemia, with otherwise normal renal and liver function. Urinalysis excluded infection or glomerular disease, and urinary cytology was negative for urothelial malignancy. Given the combination of persistent hematuria and paraneoplastic signs, imaging studies were prioritized. Renal ultrasonography identified a heterogeneous right upper pole mass, subsequently characterized by contrast-enhanced CT as a 6-cm right renal mass with heterogeneous enhancement and areas of necrosis, consistent with renal cell carcinoma (RCC), without evidence of metastasis. Multidisciplinary discussion favored radical nephrectomy, which was performed successfully with en bloc excision of the kidney, perinephric fat, and regional lymph nodes. Histopathology confirmed clear cell RCC, Fuhrman grade II, with negative margins and no lymphovascular invasion (pT1bN0M0). Postoperatively, hematuria resolved, and early regression of clubbing was observed. This case highlights the diagnostic significance of gross hematuria combined with paraneoplastic manifestations such as clubbing, emphasizing the importance of early imaging and prompt surgical intervention for localized RCC to optimize outcomes.

Article information

Journal

Journal of Medical and Health Studies

Volume (Issue)

6 (8)

Pages

31-36

Published

2025-11-26

How to Cite

Abdelrahman Idris Mohamed Idris, Basimathul Ain Mohamed Saleem, Areej Ahmed Abdalla Hassan, Abeer Ebrahim Mohamed, Fatema Abbas Jahromi, Zainab Yusuf Yaqoob, Rehma Yousuf, Fatema Hani Abdulla Hasan, Sayed Fadhel Hashem Neama, Saffaa Ahmed Hersi, Zainab Habib ALQallaf, & Shatha Adel Sarhan. (2025). The Unlikely Duo: Gross Hematuria and Clubbing Revealing Hidden Malignancy. Journal of Medical and Health Studies, 6(8), 31-36. https://doi.org/10.32996/jmhs.2025.6.8.5

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Keywords:

Malignancy, Renal Cell Carcinoma, Clubbing, Gross Hematuria, Painless Hematuria, Paraneoplastic Syndrome.