6 Ways to Lower Your Risk of Kidney Cancer

Kidney (renal) cancer has several modifiable risk factors. Diet and lifestyle changes can help address these factors and lower your risk. These are especially important if you have other risk factors you can’t control.

an older adult looking on as a healthcare professional takes their blood pressure

Kidney cancer is one of the most common cancers in the United States. Experts expect about 81,800 new kidney cancer diagnoses in the United States in 2023. It’s also the 14th most common cancer worldwide.

Kidney cancer happens when cells in your kidneys change and grow abnormally. We aren’t sure what causes these cells to change, but several factors are known to increase your risk.

Some of these risk factors are in your control. Specific lifestyle changes can lower your risk of developing kidney cancer. And if you’ve had kidney cancer in the past, the changes may also reduce the chances of cancer returning.

Language matters

We use “women” and “men” in this article to reflect the terms historically used to gender people. But your gender identity may not align with how your body responds to this disease. Your doctor can better help you understand how your specific circumstances will translate into risk factors, diagnosis, symptoms, and treatment.

As of August 2020, the most expensive drug in America is Myalept, a drug used to treat leptin deficiency. A month’s worse of this drug costs $71, 306 per month, according to research from GoodRx. Myalept is known as an “orphan drug” because it’s intended to treat a rare disease.

See also  How Common Is DID? Early Symptoms, Causes