Renal and upper tract tumours
Appearance
Histopathology
[edit | edit source]- Benign
- Adenoma
- Cortical adenomas
- Generally small
- Asymptomatic
- Angioma
- May cause profuse haematuria, often in young adults
- Needs angiogram to diagnose
- Angiomyolipoma
- Often associated with tuberous sclerosis
- Typical appearance on CT
- Can bleed into themselves
- Malignant elements present in about 25%
- Adenoma
- Malignant
- Renal cell carcinoma
- Derives from renal tubular epithelial cells
- Median age 64yo
- Risk factors: genetics, obesity, male gender, hypertension, smoking, CKD, haemodialysis, kidney transplant, acquired cystic disease of the kidney
- Subtypes:
- Clear cell RCC
- Most common - 83-88% of metastatic RCC
- Papillary RCC
- Chromophobe RCC
- Clear cell RCC
- Renal cell carcinoma
- Grading:
- Fuhrman grading system - 4 nuclear grades
- Leibovich score following nephrectomy from 0 to 11
Presentation
[edit | edit source]- Classic triad of loin pain, loin mass and haematuria is present <10%
- Mostly arise as incidental findings
- Paraneoplastic syndromes can include hypercalcaemia, fever and erythrocytosis
Staging
[edit | edit source]- CT chest, abdo, pelvis
- MRI can provide further information about invasion into nearby structures
Treatment
[edit | edit source]- Surgery
- Indications: disease confined to kidney, also sometimes offered with cytoreductive intent to those with metastatic disease
- Partial nephrectomy
- Indicated with T1 tumour (equivalent oncological outcomes) and normal contralateral kidney; indicated in those with only one kidney; in those with bilateral RCC; in those with vHL
- Complications:
- Haematuria
- Perirenal haematoma
- Urinary fistula
- AKI
- Infection
- Radical nephrectomy
- Removal of kidney, perirenal fat, adrenal gland and regional lymph nodes
- Mostly laparoscopic, especially stage I and II tumours
- Active surveillance
- Offered in conjunction with RFA ablation/cryotherapy to elderly patients or those that cannot have surgery
- Intervention for growth to 3-4cm or by >0.5cm per year
- Medical
- Tyrosine kinase inhibitors can exploit the vascular nature of the lesion
- Average duration of disease control is 8-9 months
Upper tract TCC
[edit | edit source]- Risk factors: same as bladder cancer
- Often presents late with advanced disease
- 40% will develop a bladder cancer at some point
- Treatment
- Nephroureterectomy, in the absence of metastatic disease
Nephroblastoma (Wilms' tumour)
[edit | edit source]- Histopathology
- Elements from embryonic nephrogenic tissue
- Usually discovered <5yo
- Usually in one kidney
- Haematuria - unfavourable symptoms suggesting extension into renal pelvis
- Metastasis to lungs occurs early
- Most unilateral tumours have neoadjuvant CTX followed by nephrectomy
- 80% survive long term, but worse prognosis with mets