Surgery to remove part or all of your kidney

The size of the cancer and whether it has spread will help your surgeon decide what type of surgery you can have. They might recommend you have part of your kidney removed (partial nephrectomy) or your whole kidney (radical nephrectomy).

Your surgeon may also remove some of the lymph nodes Open a glossary item and the tissue around your kidney. Rarely they may need to remove the adrenal gland Open a glossary item which sits above your kidney.

Surgery can remove cancer that:

  • is completely within the kidney (early kidney cancer)
  • has spread into nearby tissues (locally advanced kidney cancer)

Surgery aims to cure the cancer if the surgeon can remove it completely.

Sometimes surgery may not be able to cure the cancer, particularly if it has already spread. But it can still help to control its growth and relieve some symptoms.

The anaesthetist will give you a general anaesthetic Open a glossary item (GA) so you will be asleep when you have the surgery.

Removing part of your kidney (partial nephrectomy)

Removing part of the kidney is used to treat small kidney cancers that have not spread. These are normally stage 1 kidney cancers (7cm across or less). Or larger cancers if you can’t have your whole kidney removed. Reasons for this include having only one kidney or your kidneys do not work very well.

The surgeon only removes the part of the kidney containing the cancer. The rest of the kidney is left behind. This is also called nephron sparing surgery. The nephron is the filtering unit of the kidney – so you have some working kidney left after the operation.

Some people may not be able to have this surgery because of the cancer’s position in the kidney. Your surgeon will talk to you about this.

Diagram showing the kidneys before and after a partial nephrectomy operation

Removing your whole kidney (radical nephrectomy)

The surgeon removes the whole kidney and some of the tissue around it. They may also remove some of the lymph nodes near the kidney.

Above each kidney is an adrenal gland. It is quite unusual for cancer to spread to one of the adrenal glands. But if the surgeon thinks the gland contains cancer cells they might remove it at the same time.

If they do have to remove the adrenal gland you will be perfectly well with only one. The remaining adrenal gland will make all the hormones you need.

Diagram showing before and after a radical nephrectomy

A radical nephrectomy is major surgery. But if your cancer hasn't spread, you may not need any more treatment. Your doctor will continue to monitor you carefully.

Surgery to relieve symptoms of kidney cancer

If surgery is unlikely to cure the cancer your doctor may still recommend you have your kidney removed. This is called a palliative nephrectomy. It can help with symptoms such as pain or blood in your urine. 

Kidney cancer can release chemicals into your blood. These are called cytokines. They can cause symptoms such as drowsiness or sickness. Removing the kidney can reduce or get rid of these symptoms.

Removing the kidney may also slow down the growth of the cancer in other parts of your body.

Your specialist can tell you whether surgery is recommended for you.

Keyhole surgery for kidney cancer

Surgeons normally remove all or part of a kidney using small cuts in the tummy (abdomen) instead of making one large cut (open surgery). This is called keyhole surgery or laparoscopic surgery. Sometimes your surgeon may use a robot to do the operation. This is called robot assisted laparoscopic surgery.

Laparoscopic surgery 

Your surgeon uses an instrument called a laparoscope. It is like a telescope with a light at one end and a camera at the other. This lets your surgeon see into your body. They also put some gas into your tummy (abdomen) which creates space, and helps them to see better.

Your surgeon makes 3-5 small cuts through your skin. Each cut is around a centimetre long. They put the laparoscope and other small instruments through the cuts to do the operation. They watch what they're doing on a television screen. If you're having all of your kidney removed (radical nephrectomy), your surgeon separates the blood vessels and the ureter from the kidney. They can then remove the kidney.

Diagram showing laparoscopic surgery to remove a kidney

If you're only having part of your kidney removed (partial nephrectomy), your surgeon may temporarily stop the blood flowing to the kidney. This reduces the amount of blood lost during the operation.

Your surgeon makes one of the small cuts larger so they can remove part or all of your kidney from the body. At the end of the operation the surgeon lets the air out of your abdomen. But you may still get some trapped wind pain afterwards.

Robot assisted laparoscopic surgery

Some hospitals use a machine (robot) to control the laparoscopic instruments during surgery. This is called robot assisted surgery, robotic surgery or da Vinci surgery. In the UK robot assisted laparoscopic surgery is mainly done at specialist cancer hospitals. 

The robot has 2 machines. They are the:

  • patient unit
  • console unit

During the operation the patient unit is beside you. It has 4 arms that hold the camera and surgical instruments.

Your surgeon makes a few small cuts in your skin. They put the camera and instruments through the cuts and connect them to the patient unit.

The console unit is where the surgeon sits. This is still in the operating theatre but is separate from the patient unit. It has a screen that gives the surgeon a 3D magnified view of the operation area. 

The console unit has controls. The surgeon uses these to move the instruments in the patient unit.

The photo below is an example of robot assisted laparoscopic surgery. You can see the doctor sitting at the console unit on the right of the picture.

Photograph of robotic surgery

Benefits and risks of keyhole surgery

Keyhole surgery techniques have different risks and benefits to open surgery.

The advantages of keyhole surgery are you:

  • are likely to need less painkilling medicine after your operation
  • can usually go home from hospital sooner
  • usually recover from the operation quicker
  • have less scarring

The disadvantages of keyhole surgery are: 

  • the operation may take longer, so you may be under anaesthetic for longer
  • sometimes the surgeon has to switch to open surgery during the operation - for example, if the cancer is difficult to reach or there is difficulty controlling bleeding

If you're interested in having keyhole surgery, talk to your surgeon. You may need a referral to a specialist urological surgeon who has experience in it.

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