What tests will the doctor want to do?
If you have signs of cancer, your doctor will usually feel your
abdomen for lumps.
Your doctor may order a special x-ray called an intravenous
pyelogram (IVP). During this test, a dye containing iodine is
injected into your bloodstream. This allows your doctor to see
the kidney more clearly on the x-ray.
Your doctor may also do an ultrasound, which uses sound waves
to find tumors, or a special x-ray called a CT or CAT scan to
look for lumps in the kidney. CT scan also involve injection
of the same dye as IVPs. CT scans are used to confirm the findings
of the IVP and also to help determine the extent or spread of
the cancer in and around the kidney. A special scan called magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI), which uses magnetic waves to find tumors,
may also be done.
On rare occasions, we will ask the radiologist to do a needle
biopsy of a suspected kidney tumor to find out if the lump or
mass or cyst seen on the other tests is benign or malignant.
We do very few needle biopsies of kidney tumors because of the
danger of bleeding and other problems. The diagnosis can usually
be made with the X-rays and other tests mentioned above.
Once the diagnosis of kidney cancer is made, your chance of
recovery (prognosis) and choice of treatment depend on the stage
of your cancer (whether it is just in the kidney or has spread
to other places in the body) and your general state of health.
The staging system for renal cell cancer is based upon the degree
of tumor spread beyond the kidney. This will be determined by
the various tests that will give us some idea of the spread of
the tumor before most therapy is offered. These tests may include,
although not necessarily all:
-
CT or MRI scans of abdomen, chest and head
-
Bone scans
-
Chest X-ray or chest tomograms (special X-ray type)
-
Arteriogram or venacavagram (X-rays of arteries and veins
to and from the kidney)
-
Blood tests
When all staging information that is necessary is available,
a stage of the cancer will be given.
What is the treatment?
There are treatments for most patients with renal cell cancer.
Five kinds of treatment are used:
-
Surgery (taking out the cancer in an operation)
-
Chemotherapy (using drugs to kill cancer cells)
-
Radiation therapy (using high-dose x-rays or other high-energy
rays to kill cancer cells)
-
Hormone therapy (using hormones to stop cancer cells from
growing)
-
Biological therapy (using your body's immune system to fight
cancer).
S u r g e r y
Surgery is a common treatment for renal cell cancer. Your doctor
may take out the cancer using one of the following: Radical nephrectomy
removes the kidney with the tissues around it. Some lymph nodes
in the area may also be removed.
Partial nephrectomy removes the cancer and part of the kidney
around the cancer. This is usually done only in special cases,
such as when the other kidney is damaged or has already been
removed.
C h e m o t h e r a p y
Chemotherapy uses drugs to kill cancer cells. Chemotherapy may
be taken by pill, or it may be put into the body by a needle
in a vein or muscle.
Chemotherapy is called a systemic treatment because the drugs
enter the bloodstream, travel through the body, and can kill
cancer cells throughout the body. Unfortunately, our success
using chemotherapy for kidney cancer has been limited but new
drugs are being tested actively around the country.
R a d i a t i o n t h e r a p y
Radiation therapy uses x-rays or other high-energy rays to kill
cancer cells and shrink tumors.
Radiation may come from a machine outside the body (external
radiation therapy) or from putting materials that contain radiation
through thin plastic tubes (internal radiation therapy) in the
area where the cancer cells are found. Radiation can be used
alone or before or after surgery and/or chemotherapy.
Radiation as primary treatment for kidney cancer has not met
with great success. Radiation's most common uses are to treat
areas of cancer spread, such as to bone or brain. On occasion
we will treat the kidney directly if the cancer cannot be removed
and is causing symptoms such as pain or bleeding.
H o r m o n e t h e r a p y
Hormone therapy uses hormones (taken by pill or injected with
a needle) to stop cancer cells from growing. We are not sure
why hormones work on kidney cancer, but there does appear to
be some limited action against the cancers in some patients.
B i o l o g i c a l t h e r a p y
Biological therapy tries to get your own body to fight cancer.
It uses materials made by your own body or made in a laboratory
to boost, direct, or restore your body's natural defenses against
disease.
Biological therapy is sometimes called biological response modifier
(BRM) therapy or immunotherapy. That is, we use the body's own
immune system to fight the kidney cancer like it would fight
an infection. Some limited successes have been obtained using
immunotherapy and we continue to research this exciting field
looking for better answers.
O t h e r t r e a t m e n t o p t i o n s
Sometimes a special treatment called arterial embolization is
used to treat renal cell cancer. A narrow tube (catheter) is
used to inject small pieces of a special gelatin sponge into
the main blood vessel that flows into the kidney to block the
blood cells that feed the tumor. This prevents the cancer cells
from getting oxygen or other substances they need to grow.
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