Renal Cancer Flashcards
What are two types of renal cancer?
- Wilms tumour (nephroblastoma)
- renal cell carcinoma
Who is affected by Wilms tumours?
young children, usually between 3-5 years old
Do Wilms tumours occur in one or both kidneys?
can be in one or both
Do Wilms tumours occur with any other problems?
yes - often occur with other congenital anomalies (aniridia - lack of iris, hemihypertrophy - enlargement of one side of face or body)
What causes Wilms tumours?
- gene mutation, several chromosomes involved
- includes abnormality of Wilms tumour gene (WT1) on chromosome 11
Describe a Wilms tumour.
- composition similar to normal fetal tissue (blastemic, stromal, epithelial tissue)
- usually a solitary mass, sharply demarcated
- may be encapsulated
- can grow to large size
How are Wilms tumours staged?
- stage 1 - limited to kidney (can be excised)
- stage 2 - extends to renal capsule (can still be excised)
- stage 3 - tumour extends to abdomen
- stage 4 - metastasis via blood, usually to lung
What are signs and symptoms of a Wilms tumour?
- large asymptomatic abdominal mass
- hypertension
- may have abdominal pain, vomiting
- hematuria (gross or microscopic)
Where does renal cell carcinoma normally arise?
any portion of the kidney but most commonly in the upper pole
What are risk factors for renal cell carcinoma?
- heavy smoking
- obesity, especially in women
- exposure to petroleum products, heavy metals, asbestos
- acquired cystic kidney disease associated with chronic renal insufficiency
What are 5 categories of renal cell carcinoma?
1) clear cell carcinoma - most common
- have clear cytoplasm
- usually have chromosome 3 deletion
- usually arise from proximal tubular epithelial cells
2) papillary tumours
3) chromophobic tumours
4) oncocytomas
5) collecting duct tumours
Is there a bias in incidence of renal cell carcinoma?
more common in men
What are the signs and symptoms of renal cell carcinoma?
- usually asymptomatic
- when advanced: hematuria (can be intermittent and microscopic), flank pain, palpable flank mass
How is renal cell carcinoma diagnosed?
- often incidental
- ultrasound, CT, MRI
How is renal cell carcinoma treated?
- surgery (radical nephrectomy with lymph node dissection is treatment of choice, if both kidneys involved though, nephronsparing surgery)
- chemo
- immunotherapy