Kidney tumours Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two main types of malignancy kidney tumours?

A

Renal cell carcinoma (80-90%)

Transitional cell carcinoma

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2
Q

Who is likely to develop RCC?

A

RCC arise from proximal renal tubular epithelium. These account for approx. 80-90% of renal cancers and typically occur above the age of 55 in men (2:1 ratio). 15% of haemodialysis patients develop RCC

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3
Q

What are the features of RCC?

A
• Asymptomatic – incidental finding
• Haematuria
• Loin pain
• Abdominal mass
• Anorexia
• Malaise
• Weight loss
• PUO
• Invasion of left renal vein can compress testicular vein to cause a varicocele. 
• 25% have metastasis at presentation.
o Spread may be direct (Renal vein), via lymph or haematogenous (bone, liver, lung)
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4
Q

How are RCCs diagnosed?

A

Increased BP due to increased renin secretion

Bloods: FBC (polycythaemia from erythropoietin section), CRP, U&E, ALP (bony metastasis)

Urine: RBC’s, Cytology

Imaging: USS, CTM/MRI, IVU (filling defect +/- calcifications), CXR (cannon-ball metastasis)

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5
Q

How are RCCs treated?

A

Radial nephrectomy (nephron-sparing surgery is as good for T1 tumours + preserves renal function)

RCCs are generally resistant to radiotherapy and chemotherapy

Biological therapies e.g. sunitinib, bevacizumab, sorafenib (unresectable or metastatic disease)

Temsirolimus - 1st line treatment for patients with multiple poor-risk factors.

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6
Q

What is the prognosis like for RCC?

A

Mayo prognostic risk score (SSIGN) is used to predict survival uses information on tumour Stage, SIze, Grade and Necrosis.

Prognosis: 10yr survival ranges from 96.5% (SSIGN score = 0-1) to 19.2% (SSIGN score = >10)

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7
Q

Where can TCC arise?

A

Transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) may arise in the bladder (50%), ureter or renal pelvis

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8
Q

Who does TCC normally affect and how does it present?

A

They normally occur above the age of 40 and are 4x more likely to occur in men. They present with painless haematuria, frequency, urgency, dysuria or urinary tract obstruction.

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