protocols for follow up testing

adman
adman Member Posts: 336
I've recently been looking for another Dr to handle my follow up testing. The Dr that did the surgery has only ordered an ultrasound and chest xray, which seems like a light follow up.
My Full-Neph was 07/17/12

Stage 1 5.0 cm - right kidney
Grade 1
Clear Margins
NX

I have been speaking with Urology/ Oncology dept's in a few institutions and it's funny how some think I need a CT w xray, bloodwork, etc every 3 months, and others follow some protocol for a T1b tumor that say a CT every 12 months.

How can these be so different?

Comments

  • adman
    adman Member Posts: 336
    additional info.....
    FYI....shared from another board I'm on...


    Follow-up guidelines after radical or partial nephrectomy for localized and locally advanced renal cell carcinoma [2009]:

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2645874/


    Surveillance Strategies for Renal Cell Carcinoma Patients Following Nephrectomy [2006]:

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1471767/
  • Texas_wedge
    Texas_wedge Member Posts: 2,798
    adman said:

    additional info.....
    FYI....shared from another board I'm on...


    Follow-up guidelines after radical or partial nephrectomy for localized and locally advanced renal cell carcinoma [2009]:

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2645874/


    Surveillance Strategies for Renal Cell Carcinoma Patients Following Nephrectomy [2006]:

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1471767/

    Follow-up
    The first person I'd look to for thoughts on this subject is Robin Martinez. You couldn't go far wrong if you follow her advice.

    Thanks for the links. The papers you quote are interesting but remember it's not valid to extrapolate from statistical studies to your own case.
  • adman
    adman Member Posts: 336

    Follow-up
    The first person I'd look to for thoughts on this subject is Robin Martinez. You couldn't go far wrong if you follow her advice.

    Thanks for the links. The papers you quote are interesting but remember it's not valid to extrapolate from statistical studies to your own case.

    Thanks, Mr. Wedge...

    Not sure I get your last point, but thanks anyway.

    does anyone else have anything to add to this discussion? I figured I would hear from all of the site 'experts' on this one....
  • adman
    adman Member Posts: 336
    treatment schedule...
    Doesn't seem aggressive enough. Thoughts?

    @1 and 6 month: lab of complete metabolic panel (CMP) and no xrays.

    @ 1 year: lab of CMP and a chest xray (CXR)

    @2 years: CMP and CXR and CT scan

    @ 3 years: CMP and CXR

    @4 years: CMP and CXR and CT scan

    @5 years: CMP and CXR
  • nyc_girl
    nyc_girl Member Posts: 27
    adman said:

    treatment schedule...
    Doesn't seem aggressive enough. Thoughts?

    @1 and 6 month: lab of complete metabolic panel (CMP) and no xrays.

    @ 1 year: lab of CMP and a chest xray (CXR)

    @2 years: CMP and CXR and CT scan

    @ 3 years: CMP and CXR

    @4 years: CMP and CXR and CT scan

    @5 years: CMP and CXR

    Radiation
    Keep in mind that CT scans expose the patient to a great deal of radiation, which can lead to new problems down the road. I think (and hope) that doctors consider stage and grade when ordering follow-up testing - and weigh the risks and benefits of the various screening techniques. I'm sure cost is also a factor.

    Stage 1, Grade 3
    6mos. - Blood work, Ultrasound, and Chest x-ray
    1 yr. - Blood work, CT scan (chest & abdomen)
    After 1 year, if all goes well, most likely blood work, ultrasound + chest x-ray every 6 months.
  • icemantoo
    icemantoo Member Posts: 3,361 Member
    nyc_girl said:

    Radiation
    Keep in mind that CT scans expose the patient to a great deal of radiation, which can lead to new problems down the road. I think (and hope) that doctors consider stage and grade when ordering follow-up testing - and weigh the risks and benefits of the various screening techniques. I'm sure cost is also a factor.

    Stage 1, Grade 3
    6mos. - Blood work, Ultrasound, and Chest x-ray
    1 yr. - Blood work, CT scan (chest & abdomen)
    After 1 year, if all goes well, most likely blood work, ultrasound + chest x-ray every 6 months.

    Follow up
    As we compare each others follow ups we are comparing apples and oranges or at the very least different kinds of apples and different kinds of oranges. Each doctor has their own tweaks and these change as they see other cases, talk to other doctors, read and take part in studies and still have honest differences amongst themselves. Add to that Insurance and managed care guidelines. If there were not these considerations the nurse could check off your symtoms on a chart and order the tests. While it may be helpful to get an idea about protocol from other members, don't take it as gospel only as general guidelines.



    Icemantoo
  • Texas_wedge
    Texas_wedge Member Posts: 2,798
    icemantoo said:

    Follow up
    As we compare each others follow ups we are comparing apples and oranges or at the very least different kinds of apples and different kinds of oranges. Each doctor has their own tweaks and these change as they see other cases, talk to other doctors, read and take part in studies and still have honest differences amongst themselves. Add to that Insurance and managed care guidelines. If there were not these considerations the nurse could check off your symtoms on a chart and order the tests. While it may be helpful to get an idea about protocol from other members, don't take it as gospel only as general guidelines.



    Icemantoo

    Follow up
    A very useful observation, iceman, that I think we should all try to remember in future.
  • dl650a
    dl650a Member Posts: 37
    follow-ups
    In my case, my Doc's protocol (for me) is follow-up chest x-ray and blood work every 6-months for 2 years, then annually until 5 years. In addition there is a CT scan at 2 years and 5 years. My tumor was a T2a and I'm 58 years old.

    His comment was that kidney cancers are slow growing and that he feels the radiation exposure from CT scans isn't warranted for regular CT scans.

    Everyone's case is individual.

    Ed
  • foxhd
    foxhd Member Posts: 3,181 Member
    dl650a said:

    follow-ups
    In my case, my Doc's protocol (for me) is follow-up chest x-ray and blood work every 6-months for 2 years, then annually until 5 years. In addition there is a CT scan at 2 years and 5 years. My tumor was a T2a and I'm 58 years old.

    His comment was that kidney cancers are slow growing and that he feels the radiation exposure from CT scans isn't warranted for regular CT scans.

    Everyone's case is individual.

    Ed

    Protocol
    First the good news is that your cancer was caught very early.Probably completely eliminated with surgery. As for exposure from ct scans, I bet I have had at least 15 since last October. Probably another half dozen before the end of the year. I would gladly have settled for only a few. So, I wouldn't be concerned. Wonder what medscanmans take is?
  • NewDay
    NewDay Member Posts: 272
    foxhd said:

    Protocol
    First the good news is that your cancer was caught very early.Probably completely eliminated with surgery. As for exposure from ct scans, I bet I have had at least 15 since last October. Probably another half dozen before the end of the year. I would gladly have settled for only a few. So, I wouldn't be concerned. Wonder what medscanmans take is?

    Slow Growing?
    My doctor told me that mine was very fast growing, so I don't know that you can make a blanket statement that kidney cancer is slow growing. However, I think that adman's being grade 1 does indicate that his is slow growing, so his followup plan would not need to be as aggressive as someone else's. I think there are so many factors that go into analyzing the cancer's aggressivness(stage, grade, necrosis, histological subtype, sarcomatoid, etc.), as Iceman said, it is hard to compare our plans. I, too, am interested in what medscanman thinks.

    Kathy
  • Max Power
    Max Power Member Posts: 60
    My question about ultra-sound.
    After my nephrectomy all I had was semi-annual ultrasounds. I was told that the most likey places to metastisize are the spleen (if I recall), the lungs, perhaps the liver and not the other kidney (thank God).

    When the metastisis was found, it was at the very top corner of the ultrasound and they ordered a CT scan to see what it was. They found a lot. I always wondered what would have happened if that lesion was just a little further north.

    My concern is, what area does the ultrasound cover? Is it enough?
  • Max Power
    Max Power Member Posts: 60
    adman said:

    Thanks, Mr. Wedge...

    Not sure I get your last point, but thanks anyway.

    does anyone else have anything to add to this discussion? I figured I would hear from all of the site 'experts' on this one....

    On Mr. W's last point.
    This applies to any stastics, but I'll use a medical case as an example.

    If you are a doctor and a 70-year old male patient who smokes and is overweight comes into your office, you probably know of stastics that apply to such a patient and even the probablility of outcomes.

    However it is considered wrong, immoral even, to apply these stastics to the individual who walks into your office because you have no idea where on the bell curve he falls. It is your duty to find out. Barring that, if you have to assume something, assume he is not the mean but could be the extremely fortunate end of the spectrum.
  • adman
    adman Member Posts: 336
    NewDay said:

    Slow Growing?
    My doctor told me that mine was very fast growing, so I don't know that you can make a blanket statement that kidney cancer is slow growing. However, I think that adman's being grade 1 does indicate that his is slow growing, so his followup plan would not need to be as aggressive as someone else's. I think there are so many factors that go into analyzing the cancer's aggressivness(stage, grade, necrosis, histological subtype, sarcomatoid, etc.), as Iceman said, it is hard to compare our plans. I, too, am interested in what medscanman thinks.

    Kathy

    Stage 1....slow growing???

    Does Stage 1 always indicate a slow growing tumor?

    Mine was Clear Cell RCC - Grade 1 as well
    5.0 cm.
    All margins were clear as well.
  • Digger95
    Digger95 Member Posts: 59
    adman said:

    Stage 1....slow growing???

    Does Stage 1 always indicate a slow growing tumor?

    Mine was Clear Cell RCC - Grade 1 as well
    5.0 cm.
    All margins were clear as well.

    Not sure, Adman...
    I had the exact same diagnosis as you (same size and everything) and at the time (July, 2000) my nephrologist told me that it had likely taken two years or more for my tumor to reach that size, and therefore was 'slow growing'. For all I know he could have been talking out his arse, but that's what he told me nonetheless... that RCC is generally slow growing.
  • Texas_wedge
    Texas_wedge Member Posts: 2,798
    Digger95 said:

    Not sure, Adman...
    I had the exact same diagnosis as you (same size and everything) and at the time (July, 2000) my nephrologist told me that it had likely taken two years or more for my tumor to reach that size, and therefore was 'slow growing'. For all I know he could have been talking out his arse, but that's what he told me nonetheless... that RCC is generally slow growing.

    Tumour growth rate
    We're all amateurs here (a few exceptions like Fox and MedScanMan) so this is just speculation but I think Stage indicates age of tumour and Grade bears more on aggressiveness and hence current rate of growth. Digger's nephrologist was correct in saying that RCC is 'generally slow growing' but as regards his quantification, Digger has accurately identified the orifice from which the pronouncement issued. That's not entirely surprising since nephrologists are specialists on kidneys, not on cancer and RCC will not usually be their focus in the way it is for onco-urologists. Adman's and Diggers tumours probably took around 15 years to reach that size at the typical rate of around 1/3 cm/year. At 9 cm, but of the slower growing chromophobe type (average more like 1/4 cm/year) mine had probably been with me for 30 years or more.

    Grade reflects the cellular characteristics (rather than the macro issues of size, location and spread that classify the Stage). A higher grade indicates greater aggressiveness of growth, culminating in the most aggressive, sarcomatoid histology. Since grade tends to change as stage advances, it follows that larger, older tumours will see an accelerating rate of growth. This is of more than pasing interest for some of us and is why I'm having an emergency PET/CT scan in 14 hours time. After maybe 30 years of developing undetected, my primary tumour went from chromophobe to mainly sarcomatoid and put on a great turn of speed. The 2 recurrences I've had, so far, this year, have each gone from a standing start (too small to see) to 2.5 cm in not many weeks. My primary tumour on dx scan was esimated at 8cm and was fully contained. A few weeks later, at nephrectomy, it was 9cm. and had burst out of my kidney (right through Gerota's fascia) at several points, giving me the problems I now have.

    So much in RCC is still a work in progress. The estimates of rate of growth are very crude and based on many dodgy assumptions. They're expressed in linear terms but of course tumours are 3-dimensional and, in any case, their characters change with, e.g. vascularisation, calcification and necrosis, to name but a few parameters. Accordingly one can't afford to be dogmatic about these matters but I hope I've given a couple of pointers in roughly the right direction.
  • adman
    adman Member Posts: 336

    Tumour growth rate
    We're all amateurs here (a few exceptions like Fox and MedScanMan) so this is just speculation but I think Stage indicates age of tumour and Grade bears more on aggressiveness and hence current rate of growth. Digger's nephrologist was correct in saying that RCC is 'generally slow growing' but as regards his quantification, Digger has accurately identified the orifice from which the pronouncement issued. That's not entirely surprising since nephrologists are specialists on kidneys, not on cancer and RCC will not usually be their focus in the way it is for onco-urologists. Adman's and Diggers tumours probably took around 15 years to reach that size at the typical rate of around 1/3 cm/year. At 9 cm, but of the slower growing chromophobe type (average more like 1/4 cm/year) mine had probably been with me for 30 years or more.

    Grade reflects the cellular characteristics (rather than the macro issues of size, location and spread that classify the Stage). A higher grade indicates greater aggressiveness of growth, culminating in the most aggressive, sarcomatoid histology. Since grade tends to change as stage advances, it follows that larger, older tumours will see an accelerating rate of growth. This is of more than pasing interest for some of us and is why I'm having an emergency PET/CT scan in 14 hours time. After maybe 30 years of developing undetected, my primary tumour went from chromophobe to mainly sarcomatoid and put on a great turn of speed. The 2 recurrences I've had, so far, this year, have each gone from a standing start (too small to see) to 2.5 cm in not many weeks. My primary tumour on dx scan was esimated at 8cm and was fully contained. A few weeks later, at nephrectomy, it was 9cm. and had burst out of my kidney (right through Gerota's fascia) at several points, giving me the problems I now have.

    So much in RCC is still a work in progress. The estimates of rate of growth are very crude and based on many dodgy assumptions. They're expressed in linear terms but of course tumours are 3-dimensional and, in any case, their characters change with, e.g. vascularisation, calcification and necrosis, to name but a few parameters. Accordingly one can't afford to be dogmatic about these matters but I hope I've given a couple of pointers in roughly the right direction.

    Thank you....


    Always an interesting perspective. Wishing you well with your tests. God Bless!!