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RCC – Renal Cell Carcinoma

Introduction

This is an adenocarcinoma
These arise from the proximal tubular epithelium.
The tumours are highly vascular, and microscopically, they will appear as large cells with clear cytoplasm.
Haemorrhage within the kidney gives it a classic surface of mixed golden yellow with red.

Epidemiology

Aetiology

This is largely unknown, however some factors are suspected to precipitate this disease:

Genetic Aspects

Clinical Features

Often RCC is symptomless, until late stage. May be discovered incidentally.
The classic signs of this are:
However, many tumours are now discovered earlier as a result of incidental, or screening USS.
Note how some of these signs are endocrine effects caused by secretory activity of the tumour. These effects will disappear if the tumour is successfully treated, and if they do not, or they recur after treatment, they can be used as a marker for metastatic disease.

Invasion

Diagnosis

Staging is usually by the TNM scale. Treatment is determined by the stage of the tumour, as is survival. The basic investigations to asses the stage of the tumour are:
Tumours of less than 3cm, without invasion of the lymphatic and venous tissue will have a 10 year survival rate of greater than 90%.

Treatment

The only way to treat these tumours is by surgical excision.
Usually, the treatment is total nephrectomy, however, in the case of bilateral disease, or a poorly functioning remaining kidney, then conservative surgery may be used. If there is just a small tumour on the outside of the kidney, then you can do ‘wedge surgery’ .
As long as you have at least half of one fully functioning kidney, then renal function will be adequate.
During total nephrectomy, the perirenal fat and fascia will also be removed.
Even in the presence of metastasis, nephrectomy is still recommended, as in many cases there is regression of the metastasis after removal of the kidney.  In the case of a single metastasis, it is worthwhile to remove this secondary tumour as the metastasis is likely to be single due the relatively slow growing rate of renal cell carcinomas.

Advanced disease

Screening

There is no formal screening program. The disease is not very common, and has a wide range of presenting symptoms, and thus screening would not be cost effective.
The increasing use of USS of the abdominal for abdominal symptoms has meant a slight increase in the number of tumours identified early. 30% of tumours have metastasis at presentation.

Prognosis

5 year survival:

References

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