Suresh De Silva is a urologist based in Sydney, NSW, Australia. He works with people who have concerns involving the urinary tract, and he regularly deals with kidney growths that need careful review.
In practice, his focus includes renal oncocytoma and renal cell carcinoma (RCC). These are types of kidney tumours, and they can feel scary when you first hear the words. Over time, the most important thing is making sense of what the results mean, and what happens next. At times that means slowing things down, going through scans and reports in plain language, and answering the questions that keep popping up at home.
Kidney tumours often come to light through ultrasound, CT scans, or MRI. People may notice symptoms, or they might feel totally fine and the finding is picked up by chance. Either way, there’s usually a need to plan the next steps carefully. Suresh De Silva looks at the bigger picture, so the approach fits the person, not just the diagnosis on paper.
Because urology connects with many parts of care, it can also involve working alongside other health professionals. This might include coordinating with doctors who help with imaging, cancer care, or follow-up planning. In many cases, good care is about clear communication between teams, so patients know what to expect and when.
For renal oncocytoma, the challenge can be understanding how it compares with other kidney tumours and what the safest path is for assessment and management. For RCC, the care plan may depend on things seen on scans and other test results. Suresh De Silva’s role is to help guide that process, explain options, and support patients through each step, from early discussions to ongoing review.
He works in a patient-focused way, keeping things calm and practical. The goal is simple: help people feel informed, reduce the guesswork, and keep the plan moving at a steady pace. Sydney patients can access his urology care in the local area.
Details about education, work history, publications, and clinical trials weren’t provided, so they aren’t listed here. If you’d like, you can ask the clinic for any extra information before your appointment.