Kidney Cancer – Causes, Symptoms, Risks
Factors and More
Kidney cancer or renal carcinoma usually occurs
in older people and accounts for about 2 to 3% of cancers
in adults, affecting about twice as many men as women. In
adults, the most common type of kidney tumor is renal
cell carcinoma, which begins in the cells that line the
small tubes within your kidneys. Kidney cancer rarely
strikes children and young adults; the exceptions are a
pediatric kidney cancer called Wilms' tumor and some
forms of hereditary kidney cancer syndromes, such as von
Hippel-Lindau disease.
Causes of Kidney
Cancer
The causes are not known, however external
factors, such as smoking and obesity, have been related
to a higher incidence of kidney cancer and changing
environmental factors as well as population aging has
seen an increase in the presentation of this form of
cancer.
Signs and
Symptoms
Kidney cancer symptoms are often
overlooked because tumours are usually slow growing and not
suspected until the patient begins to experience symptoms
such as blood in the urine, pain, tiredness and a palpable
mass. Since back pain is common among people over 40 years
of age, such pain is often ignored and the presence of
kidney cancer can go undetected. Kidney cancer may also
cause high blood pressure.
Risk
Factors
The risk of developing kidney cancer is four
times higher if a close relative has had kidney cancer.
Being on dialysis for many years is a risk factor for
kidney cancer.
People who have had bladder cancer are
more likely to develop kidney cancer, and vice versa. About
three per cent of kidney cancer patients have inherited a
damaged gene that will make it likely the cancer will also
be found in their second kidney
Prevention
Not smoking is the most effective way to prevent
kidney cancer and it is estimated that the elimination of
smoking would reduce the rate of renal pelvis cancer by
one-half and the rate of renal cell carcinoma by
one-third.
Other factors that may decrease the risk
of developing kidney cancer include: maintaining a normal
body weight, a diet that is high in fruits and vegetables,
especially in bananas and root vegetables such as carrots,
maintaining normal blood pressure and limited exposure to
environmental toxins.
Diagnosing Kidney
Cancer
Cancer of the kidney is most commonly
detected with either computed tomography (CT) scan,
ultrasound or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Cystoscopy
can rule out associated bladder cancer. Kidney cancer cells
may also break away from the original tumor and spread (or
metastasize) to other parts of the body such as the lymph
nodes, bones or lungs, with about one third of cases showing
metastasis at the time of diagnosis.
Types of Kidney
Cancer
Almost 85% of this tumor are renal cell
carcinomas. A less common type of kidney is Papillary
carcinoma. Other rare kidney
cancers include: Renal sarcoma, Collecting Duct
carcinoma, Medullary and Chromophobe
carcinomas.
Treatment
Radical nephrectomy with or without the removal
of lymph nodes offers the only cure but
treatment of kidney cancer may include: surgery,
arterial embolization, radiation therapy, biological
therapy or chemotherapy depends upon the stage of the
disease and the patient's overall health.
Nephrectomy or removal of the entire organ
including the adrenal gland, adjacent lymph nodes and
surrounding normal tissue has been the norm, but recent
research shows that removal of just the tumor, produces
similar survival rates and offers less chance of
subsequent renal failure in selected cases.
Scientists have also isolated the gene
responsible for VHL disease, and this discovery offers
exciting future possibilities for improved diagnosis and
treatment of some kidney cancers. Various combinations of
interleukin-2, interferon, and other biologic agents and
even vaccines developed from cells removed from the
kidney cancer are also being investigated.
Survival
Rates
With prompt and appropriate treatment, the
kidney cancer mortality rate is fairly low, unfortunately
kidney cancer has a tendency to spread early, especially
to the lungs, sometimes before symptoms develop. The five
year survival rate is around 90-95% for tumors less than
4 cm. For larger tumors
confined to the kidney without venous invasion, survival
is still relatively good at 80-85%. If it has
metastasized to the lymph nodes, the 5-year survival is
around 5 % to 15 %. If it has spread
metastatically to other organs, the 5-year survival rate
is less than 5 %.
An important factor for those with this
form of cancer and for that matter with all cancers is that
assertive patients who actively work to overcome cancer
often increase the odds of survival, live longer, and enjoy
life more.
For more
information on various cancers
visit:
www.cancerinformation-online.com
www.prostateinformation-online.com
www.gastrointestinal-cancer.com
www.braincancersite.com
www.breastcancer-select.com
www.skincancer-select.com
www.lungcancer-select.com
For
innovative health products
visit:
www.tinyurl.com/5chwqc
|