Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3934215 European Urology Supplements 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

ContextA significant proportion of patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC) will experience recurrence or tumour progression after surgical treatment. Nowadays, several treatment options, including immunotherapy and targeted therapies, are available for management of advanced and metastatic RCC.ObjectiveThis paper aims to give an overview of the current treatment options for patients with advanced and metastatic RCC.Evidence acquisitionThis paper is based on a presentation given at the 6th Meeting of the European Society of Oncological Urology 2009, held in Istanbul, Turkey. Data were retrieved from recent review articles, original articles, and abstracts on the treatment of advanced and metastatic RCC.Evidence synthesisThe potential role of adjuvant vaccines in treatment of patients with advanced RCC after nephrectomy has been suggested. With regard to the newly developed targeted agents for treatment of metastatic clear-cell RCC, sunitinib and bevacizumab plus interferon-α (INF-α) seem promising as first-line therapy for good- and intermediate-risk patients. Temsirolimus appears to be effective as first-line treatment in metastatic RCC (mRCC) patients with poor prognosis. Sorafenib and everolimus should be considered as second-line therapy in mRCC patients. Some targeted therapies have also demonstrated clinical activities in patients with metastatic non–clear-cell RCC. Although grade 1 and grade 2 treatment-related adverse events were common with targeted therapies, most were manageable. The effect of targeted agents in earlier stage disease is currently under investigation. Cytokine therapy was associated with a modest survival benefit in mRCC. A combined analysis, however, suggested that cytoreductive nephrectomy might improve survival in patients with mRCC treated with interferon immunotherapy.ConclusionsMore research on the use of adjuvant vaccines in treating patients with advanced RCC is warranted. Although the management of metastatic disease has undergone a revolution in recent years, a lot of questions still need to be answered.

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