Definition | Causes | Risk Factors | Symptoms | Diagnosis | Treatment | Prevention

Diagnosis

Your doctor will ask about your symptoms and medical history, and perform a physical exam.

Tests may include:

  • Blood and urine tests—to check kidney function or find substances that indicate kidney cancer may be present
  • Bone scan—for this test, you receive a special radioactive material that specifically lights up bones that are undergoing an active process, such as tumor growth. Kidney cancer likes to spread to the bones. This test is often performed to ensure the bones are not involved by the cancer.
  • Chest x-rays and abdomen x-rays—tests that use radiation to take pictures of structures inside the body
  • IV pyelogram—an x-ray of the kidneys and ureters after injection of contrast dye into the blood
  • Renal angiography—an x-ray of arteries that are leading to a possible kidney tumor
  • CT scan—a type of x-ray that uses a computer to make pictures of the inside of the kidneys and the surrounding area
  • MRI scan—a test that uses magnetic waves to make pictures of the inside of the kidneys and the surrounding area
  • Renal ultrasound—a test that uses sound waves to examine the kidneys
  • Laparoscopy—a thin, lighted tube inserted through a small incision in the abdomen to look at the kidney
  • Cytoscopy—examination of the bladder, ureters, and kidneys via a thin tube inserted through the urethra
  • Biopsy—removal of a sample of kidney tissue to test for cancer cells

Treatment

Once kidney cancer is found, staging tests are performed. The purpose of these tests is to find out if the cancer has spread and, if so, to what extent. Treatment depends on the stage.

Surgery is the most important component of any curative approach to kidney cancer. There is some information suggesting immunotherapies (interleukin or interferon) may be of some benefit. Radiation can be used to treat kidney cancer that has spread to the lung, bones, or brain, but it is not considered curative.

This involves the removal of a cancerous tumor, nearby tissue, and possibly nearby lymph nodes. Surgeries to treat kidney cancer include:

  • Radical nephrectomy—removal of the entire kidney, adrenal gland, and nearby fatty tissue and lymph nodes
  • Partial nephrectomy—removal of the cancerous part of the kidney only, used to treat smaller tumors that have not spread locally.
  • Removal of metastases—removal of cancerous tissue that has spread to other parts of the body, particularly when causing symptoms

This is the use of radiation to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors. Radiation may be:

  • External radiation therapy—radiation directed at the tumor from a source outside the body

This is the use of drugs to kill cancer cells. Chemotherapy may be given in many forms including pill, injection, and via a catheter. The drugs enter the bloodstream and travel through the body killing mostly cancer cells but also some healthy cells.