RCC: Intro & Epidemiology - Kidney Chaos Kickoff
- Renal Cell Carcinoma (RCC): Most common primary renal malignancy (~90%).
- Origin: Renal tubular epithelium.
- Peak incidence: 60-70 years; M:F ratio ~ 2:1.
- Risk Factors:
- Smoking (doubles risk 🚬).
- Obesity & Hypertension.
- Chronic kidney disease & dialysis.
- Genetic syndromes (e.g., von Hippel-Lindau, Birt-Hogg-Dubé).
- Analgesic nephropathy.
- Common Histological Subtypes:
- Clear Cell RCC (70-80%): Most common, often VHL gene mutation.
- Papillary RCC (10-15%).
- Chromophobe RCC (5%).
⭐ Most significant modifiable risk factor for RCC is cigarette smoking. Quitting smoking can reduce the risk over time.
📌 RCC Risk Factors (S.H.O.C.K.S.): Smoking, Hypertension, Obesity, Chronic Kidney Disease, Known Genetic Syndromes, Sex (Male).
RCC: Pathogenesis & Histology - Cellular Crime Scene
- Pathogenesis:
- VHL gene (Chr 3p) inactivation: Central to Clear Cell RCC (ccRCC).
- ↑HIF → ↑VEGF, PDGF → angiogenesis, growth.
- Hereditary: VHL disease. Sporadic: Most common.
- Other genes: MET (Papillary), FH, BAP1, PBRM1.
- VHL gene (Chr 3p) inactivation: Central to Clear Cell RCC (ccRCC).
- Histological Subtypes:
- Clear Cell (ccRCC, ~75%):
- Clear cytoplasm (glycogen, lipids); rich vasculature.

- Papillary (PRCC, ~15%):
- Papillae, foamy histiocytes. MET (Type 1), FH mutations.
- Chromophobe (ChRCC, ~5%):
- Pale cells, prominent membranes ("plant-like"), perinuclear halos. Hale's colloidal iron+.
- Collecting Duct/Medullary: Rare, aggressive.
- Clear Cell (ccRCC, ~75%):
⭐ Most RCCs are Clear Cell type (~75%), characterized by VHL gene loss on chromosome 3p, leading to HIF pathway activation.
RCC: Clinical Features & Diagnosis - Spotting the Signs
- Classic Triad (6-10%): Hematuria, flank pain, palpable mass.
- Most common: Incidental finding on imaging (>50%).
- Systemic: Fever, weight loss, night sweats.
- Paraneoplastic (≈30%):
- Hypercalcemia (PTHrP)
- Polycythemia (EPO ↑)
- Hypertension (Renin ↑)
- Stauffer's (hepatic dysfunction)
- Anemia
- Local: Acute varicocele (L-sided, non-reducing).
- Mets: Bone pain, cough, nodes.
Diagnostic Pathway:
- Imaging:
- USG: Initial, solid vs. cystic.
- CECT Abd/Pelvis: IoC for Dx & staging. Defines mass, local/vascular extent, nodes.
- MRI: CECT C/I or equivocal (thrombus).
- Staging adjuncts: CT Chest, Bone Scan (Sx/↑ALP).
- Labs: Urinalysis (hematuria), CBC, LFT, RFT, $Ca^{2+}$, LDH.
- Biopsy (Image-guided):
- Generally NOT for resectable solid masses.
- Indications: Mets Dx pre-systemic Rx; small masses (<4cm) for active surveillance/ablation.
⭐ > Over half of RCCs are detected incidentally during imaging for other conditions, often asymptomatic.
RCC: Management & Prognosis - The Treatment Blueprint
- Localized RCC (T1-T2, N0, M0):
- Partial Nephrectomy (PN): Preferred for T1a; feasible for T1b, selected T2. Preserves renal function.
- Radical Nephrectomy (RN): For larger tumors or when PN not feasible.
- Ablative therapies (cryoablation, RFA): For small renal masses (<3 cm) in non-surgical candidates.
- Locally Advanced RCC (T3-T4, N0-1, M0):
- RN +/- regional lymphadenectomy.
- Adjuvant immunotherapy (e.g., pembrolizumab) for high-risk clear cell RCC post-nephrectomy.
- Metastatic RCC (M1):
- Cytoreductive Nephrectomy: In select patients with good performance status before systemic therapy.
- Systemic Therapy: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) +/- tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) are first-line (e.g., ipilimumab + nivolumab; pembrolizumab + axitinib).
- Prognostic Factors:
- Stage (TNM), Fuhrman/ISUP grade, tumor necrosis, sarcomatoid features.
- Performance status (Karnofsky/ECOG).
- Lab: ↑LDH, ↑Ca, ↓Hb.
⭐ For metastatic clear cell RCC, the combination of an immune checkpoint inhibitor and a VEGF TKI (e.g., pembrolizumab + axitinib) is a common first-line treatment, significantly improving progression-free survival compared to sunitinib monotherapy.
- Follow-up: Risk-stratified; imaging (CT/MRI) and labs. Recurrence commonest in first 2-3 years. 📌 Mnemonic (Prognosis - BAD): Bone mets, Anemia, Disease-free interval <1yr, ↑LDH, ↑Ca, Karnofsky <80% (IMDC criteria components).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Clear cell carcinoma is the most common RCC subtype.
- Classic triad (hematuria, pain, mass) is rare (~10%); often an incidental finding on imaging.
- Paraneoplastic syndromes (polycythemia, hypercalcemia, hypertension) are common.
- Key risk factors: smoking, obesity, and Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) syndrome.
- Radical nephrectomy is curative for localized RCC; it's radioresistant and chemoresistant.
- Lungs are the most common metastatic site (characteristic cannonball metastases).
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