Are most renal cystic solid occupations malignant?

Renal cystic solid occupations are not always malignant and require a tissue biopsy or ultrasound to determine specifically.
Renal cystic solid occupancy refers to the presence of watery cystic tissue in the kidney, and most of them are benign tumors. Most of them are benign tumors with clear boundaries around the tumor and no obvious adhesion and infiltration with tissues. Most of them are proliferative diseases caused by local inflammation, vascular malformations or infections in the kidneys.
Renal cystic solid space-occupying lesions are not always malignant, and benign tumors are more common. If you want to determine the benign or malignant nature of the tumor, it is recommended to go to the hospital for ultrasound examination and local tissue sampling biopsy, which can directly determine whether it is a malignant or benign tumor through pathological analysis and image observation, so as to make diagnostic guidance.
After the occurrence of renal cystic solid occupancy, it is recommended to go to the regular hospital in time, and choose the appropriate treatment plan under the guidance of the doctor, in order to strive for early recovery.