(HealthDay News) -- Removing a kidney does not seem to extend the life  of elderly people with kidney cancer that has not spread, a new study  finds.
Instead, it suggests, people with such cancer should  undergo more conservative treatments that preserve the non-cancerous  parts of their kidneys.
Kidney cancer cases have increased over  the past 10 years, especially among older people, and doctors are trying  to figure out the best way to treat what they call localized cancer in  this age group.
In the new study, Dr. Steve Campbell of the  Cleveland Clinic and his colleagues examined the medical records of 537  people who were at least 75 years old and had localized kidney tumors.
About  20 percent of them were simply observed, 53 percent had surgery that  spared their kidney and 27 percent had their kidney removed. In the next  four years, 28 percent of the overall group died, but just 4 percent of  the deaths were attributable to progression of their cancer.
The  type of treatment did not affect the risk for dying, the researchers  found. Rather, additional medical problems were found to have raised  that risk. And, people who had a kidney removed had increased problems  with their remaining kidney, the study found. Read more...
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