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Renal Cell Carcinoma · Kidney Tumour

Kidney Cancer - Diagnosis & Surgery

Most kidney cancers are found incidentally on a scan. With early detection, robotic kidney-sparing surgery (partial nephrectomy) achieves cure while preserving your kidney - and your long-term health.

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If you have been told you have a kidney mass or kidney tumour - do not delay. Kidney cancer that is still confined to the kidney is highly curable with surgery. The prognosis worsens significantly once it spreads beyond the kidney. Most T1 tumours (<7 cm) are cured by surgery alone. WhatsApp +91 78382 86336 for an urgent appointment.

Kidney cancer surgery Gurgaon

Types of kidney cancer

Renal cell carcinoma - the main subtypes

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) accounts for 85–90% of all kidney cancers. The remaining 10–15% includes transitional cell carcinoma of the renal pelvis and ureter (treated differently from RCC), oncocytoma (benign), and rare tumours.

Most common · 70–80%

Clear Cell RCC

Most common subtype. Cells appear clear under microscope due to lipid content. Associated with VHL gene mutation. Most responsive to targeted therapy (sunitinib, pazopanib) and immunotherapy (nivolumab) in advanced disease. Treated with partial or radical nephrectomy.

Second most common · 10–15%

Papillary RCC

Two subtypes (Type 1 and Type 2). Type 1 is generally less aggressive; Type 2 (associated with HLRCC hereditary syndrome) can be very aggressive. Surgery is the primary treatment. Targeted therapies being evaluated in clinical trials for advanced disease.

Third most common · 4–5%

Chromophobe RCC

Arises from intercalated cells of the collecting duct. Generally good prognosis - slow growing and rarely metastasises compared to clear cell RCC. Associated with Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome. Surgery is curative in the majority.

Understanding your diagnosis

Kidney cancer staging - what the T number means

Stage What it means & typical treatment
T1a (≤4 cm)Tumour ≤4 cm, confined to kidney. Robotic partial nephrectomy preferred. 5-year survival >95%. Active surveillance possible for small lesions in elderly patients.
T1b (4–7 cm)Tumour 4–7 cm, confined to kidney. Partial nephrectomy where technically feasible; radical nephrectomy if not. 5-year survival 85–90%.
T2 (>7 cm)Tumour >7 cm, confined to kidney. Radical nephrectomy usually required. Selected T2a tumours may still be amenable to partial nephrectomy. 5-year survival 70–80%.
T3Extends into major veins (renal vein, IVC) or perinephric fat but not beyond Gerota's fascia. Radical nephrectomy ± thrombectomy for IVC thrombus. 5-year survival 40–60% depending on extent.
T4 / M1Beyond Gerota's fascia (T4) or distant metastases (M1 - lung, bone, brain, liver). Surgery may still have a role (cytoreductive nephrectomy). Primary treatment is systemic: targeted therapy or immunotherapy. 5-year survival varies widely.

Workup

How kidney cancer is investigated

Imaging

  • CT abdomen with contrast - primary investigation. Characterises the mass, assesses venous involvement, lymph nodes, adrenal gland. Staging CT (chest + abdomen + pelvis) for larger tumours.
  • MRI - better than CT for assessing venous thrombus extent, and for patients who cannot receive iodinated contrast (renal impairment).
  • Bone scan / brain MRI - if symptoms or blood tests suggest metastases.

Blood tests & biopsy

  • Full blood count, LFT, LDH, calcium - prognostic factors in advanced disease.
  • Serum creatinine / eGFR - essential before surgery, especially if partial nephrectomy planned.
  • Renal biopsy - used selectively: when imaging is indeterminate, before systemic therapy for advanced disease, or to guide active surveillance decisions for small masses. Not routinely required before surgery for typical appearing RCC.

Surgical treatment

Robotic partial nephrectomy - saving the kidney, removing the cancer

For kidney tumours up to 7 cm confined to the kidney, the evidence is clear: partial nephrectomy gives equivalent cancer control to complete kidney removal, while preserving kidney function. Lost kidney function is associated with increased cardiovascular risk and earlier death - so saving every nephron matters.

Incisions
4–5 small (1–2 cm)
Hospital stay
2–3 nights
Blood loss
Significantly less than open
Return to work
3–4 weeks

The Da Vinci Surgical System provides 10x magnification and instruments with 7 degrees of freedom - allowing precise tumour excision with minimal disruption to the remaining kidney. The kidney is temporarily clamped (warm ischaemia) for typically 15–25 minutes during tumour excision; minimising this time is key to preserving kidney function.

Apollo Hospital Gurugram, Sector 26 has the Da Vinci Surgical System. Dr. Nitin performs robotic partial nephrectomy for T1 tumours and selected T2 tumours at this centre.

Ask about robotic kidney surgery

Second opinion

Been told you need your whole kidney removed?

If you have been advised radical nephrectomy (removal of the entire kidney) for a tumour that may be amenable to partial nephrectomy, a second opinion is entirely appropriate. Bring your CT scan and reports - Dr. Nitin will advise whether kidney-sparing surgery is technically feasible for your tumour.

Request second opinion

Video Education

Watch Dr. Nitin on Kidney Cancer

Surgery options and what to expect at each stage

Kidney Cancer Treatment Explained – Dr. Nitin Shrivastava

Kidney Cancer Treatment Explained

Robotic Surgery for Kidney Tumours – Dr. Nitin Shrivastava

Robotic Surgery for Kidney Tumours

Frequently asked questions

Kidney cancer - common questions answered

The majority of kidney cancers (renal cell carcinoma, or RCC) are discovered incidentally - detected by chance on an ultrasound or CT scan done for an unrelated reason such as back pain, a check-up, or abdominal symptoms. This is increasingly common as imaging is used more frequently. The classic triad of loin pain, blood in the urine, and a palpable abdominal mass now occurs in only 10% of cases and usually indicates advanced disease. This is why a kidney mass found incidentally should always be taken seriously - even if you feel completely well.

No. Not all kidney masses are cancer. Common benign masses include: angiomyolipoma (AML - fatty tumour, usually easily identified on CT by fat content), oncocytoma (benign tumour that can be difficult to distinguish from RCC on imaging alone), and simple cysts (Bosniak I and II - almost never cancer). Complex cysts (Bosniak IIF, III, IV) carry increasing cancer risk. Solid masses without fat content that are growing or have certain imaging features are treated as RCC until proven otherwise. A CT scan with contrast (and sometimes an MRI) allows accurate characterisation in most cases. Biopsy is used selectively.

Partial nephrectomy (nephron-sparing surgery) removes only the tumour and a small rim of normal tissue, leaving the rest of the kidney intact. The whole kidney is removed in radical nephrectomy. Partial nephrectomy is the gold standard for tumours up to 7 cm (T1 stage) because it preserves kidney function - which is directly linked to long-term cardiovascular health and survival. Cancer control outcomes (recurrence and survival) are equivalent to radical nephrectomy for T1 tumours. Dr. Nitin performs robotic partial nephrectomy for most T1 and selected T2 kidney tumours at Apollo Hospital Gurugram.

Robotic partial nephrectomy uses the Da Vinci Surgical System to perform kidney-sparing surgery through 4–5 small incisions (each 1–2 cm). The robotic arms provide 10x magnified 3D vision and fine instrument control that allows precise tumour excision with minimal warm ischaemia time (the period when blood supply to the kidney is temporarily clamped). Compared to open surgery, robotic partial nephrectomy has less blood loss, fewer complications, shorter hospital stay (2–3 nights vs 4–6 for open), and equivalent cancer control. Apollo Hospital Gurugram has the Da Vinci Surgical System - one of the few centres in Delhi NCR offering this.

Kidney cancer is staged T1–T4: T1a (tumour ≤4 cm, confined to kidney), T1b (4–7 cm, confined to kidney), T2 (>7 cm, confined to kidney), T3 (extends into major veins or perinephric tissue but not beyond Gerota's fascia), T4 (beyond Gerota's fascia). N0 = no lymph node spread; N1 = regional lymph nodes involved. M0 = no distant metastases; M1 = distant metastases (lung, bone, liver most common). For T1 tumours: partial nephrectomy preferred. For T2: radical nephrectomy usually needed. For T3: radical nephrectomy, sometimes with thrombectomy (removal of tumour extending into the renal vein or IVC). For M1 disease: surgery may still be considered alongside targeted therapy or immunotherapy.

Most kidney cancers are sporadic (not inherited). However, approximately 3–5% are hereditary. The most common hereditary syndrome is Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease - which causes clear cell RCC, often bilateral and at younger ages, along with cysts and tumours in other organs. Other hereditary syndromes include hereditary papillary RCC (PRCC2 mutations), Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome (chromophobe RCC and oncocytoma), and HLRCC (fumarate hydratase mutation, associated with aggressive papillary RCC type 2). Genetic testing and counselling is recommended if: kidney cancer before age 46, bilateral tumours, multiple tumours, or family history of kidney cancer.

Active surveillance (AS) means monitoring a small kidney tumour with regular imaging rather than immediate surgery. It is appropriate for: small tumours (typically ≤2 cm, sometimes ≤3 cm), older patients (>75 years) or those with significant comorbidities, patients who prefer to avoid surgery, and incidentally found masses where imaging characteristics are reassuring. Tumours are monitored with CT or MRI every 3–6 months initially. Intervention is triggered by growth rate >5 mm/year, tumour enlargement beyond a threshold, development of symptoms, or patient preference. The risk of metastatic progression with surveillance for T1a tumours is very low (&lt;2%).

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