Childhood Wilms Tumor

Expert Care and Treatment for Childhood Solid Tumors

The Childhood Solid Tumor Center at Dana-Farber/Boston Children's Cancer and Blood Disorders Center treats children and teens with a variety of solid tumors. Our specialty programs are led by pediatric clinicians with deep expertise in diagnosis and treatment of rare and complex solid tumors. Learn more about solid tumor types that we treat.

Childhood Solid Tumor Center

What Is Wilms Tumor?

Wilms tumor, also called nephroblastoma, is a cancerous tumor in the cells of the kidney. With the right care, Wilms tumor is highly treatable.

  • Wilms tumor is the most common type of kidney (renal) cancer in children. Approximately 6 percent of all childhood cancers are Wilms tumor.
  • About 500 children in the United States are diagnosed with a Wilms tumor each year.
  • Wilms tumor can occur between infancy and age 15. It is most common in children age five or younger. Adults rarely have Wilms tumor.
  • The tumor can spread outside the kidney, most often to the abdominal lymph nodes and lungs.
  • With prompt and aggressive treatment, doctors can successfully treat Wilms tumor in most children.

At Dana-Farber/Boston Children's Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, we provide expert care for children with kidney tumors through our Kidney Tumor Program. Our team of pediatric surgeons has extensive experience treating children with Wilms tumor, including bilateral tumors.

Causes and Symptoms of Childhood Wilms Tumor

Most cases of Wilms tumor occur with no family history of the disease or other known cause. In some cases, children are born with a genetic predisposition to develop Wilms tumor.

These children have rare genetic syndromes such as:

  • Hemihypertrophy (one side of the body larger than the other).
  • WAGR syndrome (Wilms, aniridia, genitourinary abnormalities).
  • Denys-Drash syndrome (a syndrome of renal failure, hypertension, and genital abnormalities).
  • Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (an "overgrowth" syndrome).

The most common symptom of Wilms tumor is the sudden appearance of a solid mass in the abdomen. Though each child may experience symptoms differently, other symptoms may include:

  • Abdominal pain
  • Abdominal swelling
  • Blood in the urine
  • Constipation
  • Decreased appetite
  • Fever
  • High blood pressure
  • Weakness or tiredness

Wilms tumor symptoms may resemble other more common conditions or medical problems. If you notice that your child is experiencing any of the above symptoms, call your child's doctor right away.

How We Diagnose and Classify Childhood Wilms Tumor

We conduct multiple diagnostic tests to identify the size, location, and type of tumor and confirm the diagnosis. These tests may include imaging studies, biopsy, and blood and urine tests.

An essential part of diagnosing Wilms tumor involves staging and classifying the disease. It helps your child's doctor determine treatment options and prognosis. Wilms tumor staging is the process of determining whether the cancer has spread and, if so, to what extent. Doctors typically categorize kidney tumors into five stages.

Wilms tumor is staged as follows according to guidelines from the Children's Oncology Group (COG), a national consortium of pediatric cancer centers:

  • Stage I: The tumor is limited to the kidney, and surgery can completely remove it. About 20 percent of tumors are stage I.
  • Stage II: The tumor extends beyond the kidney, but surgery can remove it entirely. Roughly 22 percent of tumors are stage II.
  • Stage III: Doctors cannot altogether remove the tumor surgically, or it spills during surgery (tumor cells reach the blood or another organ during surgery), but the disease is limited to the abdomen. Approximately 32 percent of tumors are stage III.
  • Stage IV: The disease has spread from the abdomen through the bloodstream and may travel to other parts of the body, most often the lung or liver. About 20 percent of cases are stage IV.
  • Stage V: The tumor is in both kidneys (bilateral tumor) at the time of diagnosis. Around 6 percent of cases are stage V.

After completing all necessary tests, our experts meet to review and discuss the findings. Then we will meet with you and your family to talk over the results and the best treatment options for your child's individual needs.

How We Treat Childhood Wilms Tumor

Your child's physician will determine a specific course of treatment based on several factors, including:

  • Your child's age, overall health, and medical history
  • Type, location, and size of the tumor
  • The extent of the disease (stage)
  • Your child's tolerance for specific medications, procedures, or therapies
  • How your child's doctors expect the disease to progress
  • Genetic characteristics of the tumor

Your child's treatment may include:

  • Surgery: The first step in Wilms tumor treatment is surgery to remove the tumor. After surgery, we usually recommend chemotherapy and, sometimes, radiation therapy. However, we can treat some cases of low-stage Wilms tumor with surgery alone. The types of surgical procedures we use include:
    • Radical nephrectomy: This procedure removes the whole kidney, tissue around the kidney, ureter (the tube that drains urine from the kidney to the bladder), and adrenal gland (which sits on top of the kidney). Surgeons will perform this operation if the tumor has occurred in only one kidney.
    • Partial nephrectomy or kidney-sparing surgery: If your child has bilateral Wilms tumor (tumor in both kidneys) or a known predisposition to kidney cancer, your child's physician may recommend this procedure. The surgeon will remove the tumor while leaving the maximum amount of healthy kidney tissue.
  • Chemotherapy: If the tumor is very large, your child's doctor may recommend chemotherapy to try to shrink the tumor before surgery. We may also use chemotherapy after surgery.
  • Radiation therapy: The need for radiation depends on the tumor stage (extent of spread of the tumor) and tumor type. We may use radiation therapy for tumors that have spread to the lymph nodes, abdomen, or lungs.
  • Stem cell transplant: In rare cases, your doctor may recommend a stem cell transplant to treat the tumor. It allows your child's physician to give high-intensity chemotherapy in difficult-to-treat cases of Wilms tumor. Stem cell transplantation and the treatment needed to manage its effects are complex and involve some risk.

After treatment, your child will continue to receive medical care and support through our pediatric cancer survivorship programs. We provide a comprehensive follow-up medical evaluation each year and support services such as genetic counseling, patient and family education, and psychosocial assessment.

Childhood Cancer Clinical Trials

Find answers to common questions about clinical trials for childhood cancer, including whether or not a clinical trial may be the right choice for your child. Contact us and we can help you navigate your options.

Clinical Trials for Pediatric Patients

Research and Clinical Trials for Childhood Wilms Tumor

Our researchers conduct laboratory and clinical research to improve how we treat pediatric kidney tumors, including Wilms tumor. We also offer clinical trials through the Children's Oncology Group (COG). Three of our specialists — Robert Shamberger, MDElizabeth Mullen, MD, FAAP, and Tom Hamilton, MD — are on the COG renal tumor committee.

Here are some of our latest research studies:

  • Identifying the best treatment for Wilms tumor: Major advancements have occurred in the treatment of Wilms tumor over the last three decades, primarily because of studies by the National Wilms Tumor Study Group and Children's Oncology Group. Dana-Farber/Boston Children's physicians have played vital roles.

    These studies have rigorously compared treatment regimens and helped define the optimal treatment for each stage and type of Wilms tumor. In one large study, briefer courses of therapy were safer and as effective as longer courses for low-stage Wilms tumor.

    A recent COG study initiated by Dana-Farber/Boston Children's doctors, including Dr. Shamberger and Dr. Mullen, showed that children less than two years of age with small tumors could be treated safely with surgery only. These patients didn't need chemotherapy or radiation. This study also offered therapy adjustments for children with Stage I, II, and III tumors based on their specific genetic findings. This study is the first study in childhood kidney tumors to establish therapy on the individual child's tumor biology.

  • Renal tumor biology and risk stratification: Dr. Mullen is the Protocol Chair for the COG Renal Tumor Biology and Risk Stratification Protocol (AREN03B2). It has been open since 2006, remains open to accrual, and currently has enrolled over 4,800 patients. The study involves the real-time, coordinated review of Wilms tumor diagnoses by multiple specialists to determine the most accurate staging and risk stratification. Researchers have learned that many Wilms tumor cases are initially misdiagnosed or not accurately staged. With proper diagnosis and staging, children can receive the best possible treatment regimen.
  • Risk-stratifying treatment of children with bilateral tumors: The traditional treatment for pediatric kidney tumors is a two-step process:

    • Surgeons remove as much of the tumor as possible.
    • Then, oncologists use chemotherapy to eliminate remaining cancerous cells.

    If the tumor is bilateral (appearing in both kidneys), chemotherapy is sometimes used before surgery to reduce the tumor's size to save the maximum amount of healthy kidney tissue. Our researchers investigate the use of continuous pathological review throughout treatment to evaluate the best therapeutic approach for bilateral pediatric kidney tumors.

  • Searching for markers: Researchers are conducting studies to diagnose and treat kidney tumors more effectively. For example, our researchers are investigating whether kidney tumors release markers in a child's urine. If discovered, doctors could use these markers to screen for the early recurrence of relapsed cancers. They may also help clinicians screen types of tumors upfront, so that they can personalize treatments to the exact makeup of a child's tumor.

    Dana-Farber/Boston Children's physician-scientists are involved in one of the country's most comprehensive precision cancer medicine initiatives, called Profile. This vital research project will result in a database of genetic changes in all cancer types, including Wilms tumor, and will advance scientists' understanding of cancer's genetic causes and how that information may lead to improved treatment.

Learn more about our groundbreaking clinical trials.

Long-term Outcomes for Children with Wilms Tumor

As with any cancer, prognosis and long-term survival can vary significantly from child to child. With prompt, aggressive treatment, most children with Wilms tumor are successfully treated and experience relatively few side effects. More aggressive tumors that have spread significantly may be harder to cure. Should a tumor come back after treatment, your child's doctor may recommend additional surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation therapy.

The goal of treatment is both to cure the cancer and minimize the long-term effects of therapy. However, children are at some risk of late effects of the cancer and its treatment, including:

  • High blood pressure.
  • Heart and lung problems after chemotherapy or radiation therapy.
  • Slowed or decreased growth and development.
  • Reduced kidney function may appear primarily in children with tumors in both kidneys (bilateral involvement) or with a predisposition syndrome that causes kidney abnormalities (nephritis) distinct from those related to the tumor or treatment.

Factors that influence the outlook for a child with Wilms tumor include:

  • The extent of the disease
  • The histology of the tumor (what it looks like under the microscope)
  • Genetic changes in the tumor
  • Age and overall health of the child at diagnosis
  • Size of the primary tumor
  • Response to therapy
  • Your child's tolerance of specific medications, procedures, or therapies

Childhood Wilms Tumor Treatment Team

At Dana-Farber/Boston Children's, your child will receive specialized, expert care from a team of pediatric cancer doctors that is committed to your child's health. See a complete list of the specialists in our Childhood Solid Tumor Center.