Back to back surgeries
Hi Folks - I'm a 41 year old male, who recently found out that I have a leaky heart valve (mitral) and needed to undergo mitral valve repair to fix my severe regurgitation. The surgery for that is scheduled for next week (3rd May) and as part of the pre-op workup, a CT of the chest revealed the presence of a 4.8cm tumor on the right kidney. The CT indicates the tumor is contained to the kidney, though in a complicated location (resting on the renal artery / vein).
My challenge is that both the heart and urologic surgeons concur that the heart valve surgery is more important due to the potential risks of endocarditis. The recommended minimum wait time for the renal surgery is 3 months away (August at the earliest), to give the heart the time to heal back.
I want this thing out of me as soon as possible and it's going to be a long three months! Should I be worried about growth or metastasizing in this waiting period?
Comments
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I would like to think that
---the 2 surgeons took that into consideration in concuring in their opinions. Generally kidney tumors grow alowly.. In retospect the heart problem may have saved your life by finding the kidney tumor while it was relatively small and a lot more than 3 months before it otherwise be found.
icemantoo
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Yes, in the few days I'micemantoo said:I would like to think that
---the 2 surgeons took that into consideration in concuring in their opinions. Generally kidney tumors grow alowly.. In retospect the heart problem may have saved your life by finding the kidney tumor while it was relatively small and a lot more than 3 months before it otherwise be found.
icemantoo
Yes, in the few days I'm absorbing this information, I am also counting my blessings that this heart issue lead to the discovery of the kidney cancer.
Not sure if there are studies / experiences out there which show normal rates of growth? I've heard the average tumor grows at 3-5mm/year, but have read some stories which say otherwise. Not sure if they're the norm or is 3-5mm/year the normal number.
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Punster
yes most stats say 5mm to 1 cm per year
In your case the cancer will have to come second but I agree .. yesterday is too soon in my opinion..the faster it is out the better
Boy you have a handle full of worry
In the Uk many people wait three months as you have to join the queue so don’t get too focused on the wait
its a shame they can’t do both at once... was that ever a option
Annie
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I know....
the dilemma you face--well kind of. My kidney cancer was found while monitoring kidney stones. In the pre-op scans a little blip showed in my neck (thyroid) that could be a new cancer or metastic activity. Doctors decided the priority was taking care of the kidney mass then dealing with the thyroid. So, I had surgery on a Friday, discharged on Saturday, then a drive back to the hospital on Monday for a biopsy. Thankfully it was not metastic activity but another primary cancer that required a full thyroidectomy. That surgery took place almost exactly a month after my partial nephrectomy. I still have a hard time believing I had two primary cancers growing in my body that I was totoally unaware of.
I know your situation is a little different, but both do require surgery. Trust your doctors. They do have your best interest at "heart" (no pun intended).
Good luck!
Stub
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Yes, I definitely count myicemantoo said:I would like to think that
---the 2 surgeons took that into consideration in concuring in their opinions. Generally kidney tumors grow alowly.. In retospect the heart problem may have saved your life by finding the kidney tumor while it was relatively small and a lot more than 3 months before it otherwise be found.
icemantoo
Yes, I definitely count my blessings because I would've never found this tumor if it hadn't been for the heart trouble As my wife said yesterday - we should say "Why me" for all the good things, not just the bad things in our lives!
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Thanks Fox! My other concernfoxhd said:They will
manage your heart issue first. Follow up scans might suggest removal of tumor later. They may suggest a tki to stabilize or shrink the tumor until your cardiac status is ready for another procedure
Thanks Fox! My other concern re: this is that I've only seen the urologic surgeons for this and not an oncologist. Should I be trying to validate the opinions of the surgeons against that of an oncologist who might recommend managing the tumor in the waiting period? Or am I needlessly worry about this 3 month wait?
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