Understanding Cancer
Cancer begins in
cells,
the building blocks that make up tissues. Tissues make up the organs of the body.
Normally, cells grow and divide to form new cells as the body needs them. When cells grow old, they die, and new cells take their place.
Sometimes this orderly process goes wrong. New cells form when the body does not need them, and old cells do not die when they should. These extra cells can form a mass of tissue called a growth or
tumor.
Tumors can be
benign
or
malignant:
- Benign tumors are not cancer:
- Benign tumors are rarely life threatening.
- Usually, benign tumors can be removed, and they seldom grow back.
- Cells from benign tumors do not invade tissues around them or spread to other parts of the body.
- Malignant tumors are cancer:
- Malignant tumors are generally more serious than benign tumors. They may be life threatening.
- Malignant tumors often can be removed, but they can grow back.
- Cells from malignant tumors can invade and damage
nearby tissues and organs. Also,
cancer cells can break away from a malignant tumor
and enter the bloodstream or
lymphatic system. That is how cancer cells spread from the original cancer
(primary tumor)
to form new tumors in other organs. The spread of cancer is called
metastasis.
Several types of cancer can start in the kidney. This booklet is about
renal cell cancer,
the most common type of kidney cancer in adults.
This type is sometimes called
renal adenocarcinoma
or
hypernephroma.
Another type of cancer,
transitional cell carcinoma,
affects the renal pelvis. It is similar to bladder
cancer and is often treated like bladder cancer.
Wilms' tumor
is the most common type of childhood kidney cancer. It is different from adult kidney cancer and requires different treatment. Information about transitional cell carcinoma and Wilms' tumor is available from the Cancer Information Service at
1-800-4-CANCER and at
http://www.cancer.gov.
When kidney cancer spreads outside the kidney,
cancer cells are often found in nearby
lymph nodes.
Kidney cancer also may spread to the lungs, bones, or liver. And it may spread from one kidney to the other.
When cancer spreads (metastasizes) from its original place to another part of the body, the new tumor has the same kind of abnormal cells and the same name as the primary tumor. For example, if kidney cancer spreads to the lungs, the cancer cells in the lungs are actually kidney cancer cells. The disease is metastatic kidney cancer, not lung cancer. It is treated as kidney cancer, not lung cancer. Doctors sometimes call the new tumor metastatic or "distant" disease.
< Previous Section | Next Section > |