Kidney Cancer : What you Need to Know

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Epidemiology of Kidney Cancer:

Cancer is when cells in the body grow out of control. These cells can form a tumor or damaged tissue. If cancer cells grow in the kidney, it is called kidney cancer.

  • The most common kidney cancer in adults is renal cell carcinoma. It forms in the lining of very small tubes in the kidney.
  • Cancers found in the center of the kidney are known as transitional cell carcinoma.
  • Wilms tumor is a rare kidney cancer that very young children can get.

On average, people are diagnosed with kidney cancer at around age 64. It’s rarely found in people younger than age 45. More than 65,000 people will be diagnosed with kidney cancer this year in the U.S. This risk is higher in men than in women.

 

Basic Facts about Kidney Cancer

 

The terms “tumor,” “mass,” or “lesion” are used to describe an abnormal growth in the kidney. Tumors can be benign (non-cancerous) or malignant (cancerous). A fluid-filled sac, called a cyst, is the most common growth found in a kidney. Cysts are mostly not cancerous. Solid kidney tumors can be benign, but most often are found to be cancer.

 

Kidney cancer is one of the top 10 most common cancers diagnosed in the United States. Nearly 15,000 people will die from this disease. Of the people who are diagnosed early (stage I or II cancer), 75-80% will survive.

 

Kidney tumors may not hurt or show any signs. Sometimes a growth in the kidney can cause:

  • Blood in the urine
  • Pain in the side, abdomen or back that doesn’t go away
  • A lump in your abdomen
  • Loss of appetite and weight loss for no known reason
  • Anemia and fatigue

 

If cancer spreads (metastasizes) beyond the kidney, symptoms depend upon where it spreads. Short breath or coughing-up blood may occur when cancer is in the lung. Bone pain or fracture may occur when cancer is in the bone. Neurologic symptoms may occur when cancer is in the brain.

 

Cancer in the kidney is linked to the following risks:

  • Smoking
  • Obesity
  • Chronic high blood pressure
  • Misusing certain pain medicine for a long time
  • Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome
  • Tuberous sclerosis
  • Family history of kidney cancer

 

How to Diagnose Kidney Cancer

Unfortunately, there are no blood or urine tests that directly detect kidney cancer. Most often a tumor is diagnosed during routine screening for people with genetic risks (e.g. Von Hippel-Lindau disease, tuberous sclerosis). Or it is found when a person sees a doctor about an unrelated problem.

 

The National Cancer Institute (NCI) lists these tests most often used to diagnose kidney cancer:

 

  • Physical exam and history: A health care professional will examine your body to check general signs of health. They will also check for lumps or anything else that seems unusual. They will ask about your health habits, past illnesses and treatments.
  • Ultrasound exam: An image of your kidneys and organs may first be taken with an ultrasound. Here, high-energy sound waves (ultrasound) are bounced off internal tissues or organs and make images.
  • Blood chemistry studies: Blood samples are checked to look for certain substances released into the blood by your organs. If amounts are higher or lower than normal, it is a sign of disease.
  • Urinalysis: A sample of your urine is tested to see the color and contents. Unusual levels of sugar, protein, red blood cells, and white blood cells can indicate a problem.
  • Liver function test: A sample of blood is checked to measure the enzymes released by the liver. Unusual levels may be a sign that cancer has spread to the liver.
  • CT scan (CAT scan or computed tomography): This procedure makes a series of detailed pictures inside the body, taken from different angles. The pictures are made by a computer linked to an x-ray machine. A dye may be used to help see the organs or tissues more clearly.
  • MRI (magnetic resonance imaging): This imaging exam uses a magnet, radio waves and a computer to make detailed pictures of organs. Your doctor will get a clearer image of abnormal growths through these images.
  • Biopsy: A biopsy is when cells or tissues of an organ are removed and studied. The sample is viewed under a microscope by a pathologist. A pathologist is a doctor who can check for signs of cancer. For renal cell cancer, a thin needle is inserted into the tumor and a sample of tissue is removed for the biopsy.

 

WHO CAN HELP YOU IF YOU HAVEKIDNEY CANCER ?

If your tests show you have kidney cancer, you will want to talk with a cancer specialist. The doctors who can help include:

 

  • A urologist: a surgeon who specializes in treating diseases of the urinary system and reproductive systems
  • A radiation oncologist: a doctor who treats cancer with radiation therapy
  • A medical oncologist: a doctor who treats cancer with medicines such as immunotherapy

 

Treatment Options

 

The treatment plan that you choose with your doctor depends on many things:

  • Tumor grade and stage
  • Your age
  • Your overall health and health history
  • Your anatomy (the anatomy of your kidney collection system)

 

  • Watch and Wait (Active Surveillance)
  • Renal tumor ablation (freeze or heat)
  • Surgery to remove the tumor(s)
  • Targeted therapy to kill cancer cells
  • Immunotherapy/biologic therapy to kill cancer cells
  • Chemotherapy
  • Radiation to relieve pain and symptoms
  • A clinical trial to try a new treatment

Source: Urology Care Foundation and  Campbell Urology Textbook.

 

————————————-

Angelo E. Gousse, MD

Clinical Professor of Urology –

Herbert Wertheim College

of Medicine – FIU

Voluntary Professor of Urology – University of Miami , Miller School of Medicine

Director of Fellowship:Female Urology,Voiding Dysfunction, Reconstruction

Memorial Hospital Miramar,

South Broward Hospital District

1951 SW 172 Avenue, Suite 305,

Miramar, FL, 33029

Tel: 954-362-2720 | Fax: 954-362-2761

www.bladder-health.net

 

                           

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