Kidney Cancer Information Guide


What is Kidney Cancer?

Alternative Names:
Renal Cell Carcinoma
Renal Cancer
Hypernephroma
Adenocarcinoma of Renal Cells

Renal cell carcinoma affects about 3 in 10,000 people, resulting in about 31,000 new cases in the US per year.

Every year, about 12,000 people in the US die from renal cell carcinoma. It is more common in men than women, usually affecting men older than 55.

Why the cells become cancerous is not known. A history of smoking greatly increases the risk for developing renal cell carcinoma.

Some people may also have inherited an increased risk to develop renal cell carcinoma, and a family history of kidney cancer increases the risk.

People with von Hippel-Lindau disease, a hereditary disease that affects the capillaries of the brain, commonly also develop renal cell carcinoma.

Kidney disorders that require dialysis for treatment also increase the risk for developing renal cell carcinoma.

The first symptom is usually blood in the urine. Sometimes both kidneys are involved. The cancer metastasizes (spreads) easily (pictured on right), most often to the lungs and other organs, and about one-third of patients have metastasis at the time of diagnosis.

 
Kidney Cancer
Information Guide
What is Kidney Cancer?
What are the Symptoms of Kidney Cancer?
How is Kidney Cancer Treated?
How Can Kidney Cancer be Prevented?

Kidney Tumor - CT Scan:
CT scan of the abdomen showing a tumor
This CT scan of the abdomen shows a tumor in the left kidney (hypernephroma), located on the lower right side of the picture.
Kidney Metastases, CT Scan:
A CT scan of the middle abdomen showing metastasis
A CT scan of the middle abdomen showing metastasis (cancer that has spread) in the left kidney in a patient with carcinoma of the lung. Note the large dark circular tumor in the kidney (yellow arrow).
 
 

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