Kidney Cancer Types
Nov 21, 2017
Nov 21, 2017
Kidney cancer starts in your kidneys. This cancer usually takes the form of renal cell carcinoma, the most common type of kidney cancer. About 90 percent of kidney cancer patients gain diagnosis of renal cell carcinoma.
Renal cell carcinoma includes several subtypes, according to how the cancer cells look under a microscope. Your type of kidney cancer determines your treatment options.
Renal cell carcinoma usually develops as one tumor in one of your kidneys. Some people have two or more tumors, even tumors in both kidneys.
Subtypes of renal cell carcinoma include:
Besides renal cell carcinoma, other kidney cancers include transitional cell carcinomas, renal sarcomas and Wilms tumors.
Not all kidney tumors are cancerous, meaning they do not spread to other parts of your body. But these kidney tumors still cause problems for people affected by them. Treatment for these tumors usually includes removing or otherwise destroying them. How your benign kidney tumor is treated depends on multiple factors, such as number of tumors, tumor size, symptoms and whether the tumors appear in both kidneys. Your overall health also plays a role in treatment options.
Non-cancerous kidney tumors include renal adenoma, oncocytoma, angiomyolipoma.