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Current Approaches to the Treatment of Advanced or Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma

<ѻý class="mpt-content-deck">– An ASCO Reading Room selection

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Medpage Today
Below is the abstract of the article. or on the link below.

The optimal management approach to advanced or metastatic renal cell cancer of the clear cell type continues to rapidly evolve. Risk stratification of patients into favorable-, intermediate-, and poor-risk categories is now routinely performed. In selected individuals with low-volume indolent disease, active surveillance may be an appropriate option. Cytoreductive nephrectomy and/or surgical metastasectomy may be also be considered for selected patients after evaluation by a multidisciplinary tumor board.

Systemic frontline therapy options now include immune checkpoint inhibitor–based combination (IBC) therapies such as pembrolizumab/axitinib, nivolumab/ipilimumab, and avelumab/axitinib. With unusual exceptions, monotherapy with vascular growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors or mTOR inhibitors are no longer appropriate options in the frontline setting. Despite the established efficacy of frontline IBC, most patients will ultimately require additional lines of therapy, and oncologists must think carefully when switching to another therapy, particularly in situations of drug intolerance or apparent disease progression.

Systemic therapy options after IBC are generally tyrosine kinase inhibitor–based, and ongoing clinical trials will help optimize the treatment algorithm further. Despite many recent drug approvals for renal cell cancer (RCC), there remains a pressing need to identify new therapeutic targets.

Finally, other systemic therapy or supportive care approaches must be considered for special patient populations such as those with poor performance status, end-organ dysfunction, brain metastases, or who have undergone metastasectomy.

Practical Applications

  • In most patients with advanced or metastatic RCC who require systemic therapy, IBC therapy is currently considered the frontline standard of care. Monotherapy with a VEGF-TK or an mTOR inhibitor is no longer a reasonable option in the frontline setting except in unusual circumstances (e.g., immunotherapy ineligibility)
  • In selected patients, active surveillance and/or cytoreductive surgery (including nephrectomy or metastasectomy) remain reasonable considerations
  • Despite highly active frontline immunotherapy, most patients will require additional lines of therapy, and oncologists must think carefully when switching to another therapy, particularly in situations of drug intolerance or apparent progression
  • Systemic therapy options after immunotherapy are generally TKI-based; ongoing clinical trials will help optimize the treatment algorithm further
  • Special metastatic RCC populations such as those with poor performance status, brain metastases, and end-organ dysfunction will require individualized treatment approaches

Read an interview about the study here and expert commentary about the clinical implications here.

Read the full article

Current Approaches to the Treatment of Advanced or Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma

Primary Source

American Society of Clinical Oncology

Source Reference:

ASCO Publications Corner

ASCO Publications Corner