Expert Shares Insights on Neoadjuvant and Adjuvant Treatments for Kidney Cancer

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Neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies are being incorporated into the course of treatment for patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC), as these approaches may be able to help reduce the risk of recurrence after surgery, according to David M. Nanus, MD. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and immunotherapy agents especially have demonstrated benefit in the adjuvant setting for patients with high-risk RCC.

David M. Nanus, MD

David M. Nanus, MD

Neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies are being incorporated into the course of treatment for patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC), as these approaches may be able to help reduce the risk of recurrence after surgery, according to David M. Nanus, MD. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and immunotherapy agents especially have demonstrated benefit in the adjuvant setting for patients with high-risk RCC.

The NCCN guidelines were updated to include treatment of adjuvant sunitinib (Sutent) for patients with high-risk disease. The FDA also approved the agent in that setting afterwards based on data from the phase III S-TRAC trial, which showed that adjuvant sunitinib prolonged disease-free survival by 1.2 years in patients at high risk for recurrence versus placebo following nephrectomy.

Immunotherapy has shown benefit in other genitourinary cancers and has improved progression-free survival (PFS) in RCC in previous trials. Nanus said that this is the most exciting advance in RCC to date, although overall survival (OS) data have not yet been confirmed.

Nanus also said that despite surgery being a vital part of treatment for RCC, adding in TKIs or immunotherapy may offer a prolonged benefit for high-risk patients.

In an interview withTargeted Oncology, Nanus, a medical oncologist at Weill Cornell Medicine/NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, discussed the promising role of immunotherapy in the treatment landscape of RCC, as well as the continued role of surgery.

TARGETED ONCOLOGY: Can you discuss the issue of neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapy in patients with kidney cancer?

Nanus: There have been many studies over the years, dating back 3 or 4 decades, trying to improve the outcomes for patients with renal tumors. These are generally large tumors that have invaded the vena cava that have a higher risk of relapse after surgery. Can we do anything to reduce that risk of relapse? For the longest time, we had no benefit—meaning that all of these randomized trials never showed an improvement in OS. Many of these studies are from the cooperative groups, specifically studies with sunitinib, pazopanib (Votrient), and sorafenib (Nexavar). 

More recently, one study did show a benefit for patients in terms of PFS. These are patients with T3 and T4 kidney cancer—a very high-risk subset. This showed that there was an improvement in PFS. Meaning, the patients who went on sunitinib for about 1 year seemed to have a lower risk of progression. Although, there was no improvement in OS, so patients haven't yet seemed to live any longer. There is continued follow-up. Based on those data, the NCCN guidelines changed, making this an option for treatment. You could still do observation, or you could consider giving sunitinib adjuvant therapy.

TARGETED ONCOLOGY: What treatments in RCC seem to be the most promising?

Nanus: What may be most promising is immunotherapy. It could be combined in the future with a TKI—some of those studies in advanced-stage patients have showed impressive preliminary results. The use of immunotherapy has a lot of rationale and is generating a lot of excitement. There are questions in terms of when to use immunotherapy. In preclinical models, the concept of giving immunotherapy while the tumor is still there—so that their immune system actually recognizes the tumor antigens—then removing the tumor surgically and continuing immunotherapy seems to be one of the more effective strategies. There are a number of trials using that rationale.

In lung cancer, bladder cancer, and other tumor types, we are seeing efficacy in high-risk relapsed patients. The toxicities tend to be less. If you look at all of the TKI studies, there was, almost universally, a dose reduction because of adverse events (AEs). With immunotherapy, many patients have minimal AEs, and only some have severe AEs. That is the most exciting area, and there will be future studies of combination TKIs and immunotherapy. There is a lot of hope and optimism that we are going to improve outcomes for patients with T3, T4, and bulky T2 disease.

TARGETED ONCOLOGY: Are there certain toxicities that physicians should be looking out for, or telling their patients to be aware of with immunotherapy agents?

Nanus: There is more of a recognition of AEs by the community oncologist who commonly handles immunotherapies. The general internist doesn't understand it. I have had cases where patients have gone to the emergency room and don't know what's going on. They get admitted and then they reach out to me, and I say, "Oh, you have adrenal insufficiency. You have to do this and that."

More and more, oncologists are recognizing these AEs, and they are looking for them. It is mostly things like adrenal insufficiency, rashes, nephritis, hepatitis, and so forth. As oncologists—maybe more than urologists—we tend to do the same thing, which is check the blood test and examine the patient. As a community, we are getting better at it. There are a lot of publications and seminars on how to taper steroids.

The oncologist should be telling their patient to reach out to them if they are feeling fatigued or with any issue. In the community, the other doctors taking care of the patients may not understand these AEs.

TARGETED ONCOLOGY: What ongoing trials are you particularly interested in seeing the results of?

Nanus: There are a number of phase III upfront trials that will be interesting. One of the issues with combinations, such as ipilimumab (Yervoy) plus nivolumab (Opdivo), is the risk of immunologic AEs. We are seeing that some of the trials with a PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor plus TKIs may have less toxicities and better tolerated, with just as good efficacy.

In the adjuvant setting, there are about 3 or 4 immunotherapy trials. There are a lot of things going on, and there will probably be more than 1 drug that shows benefit and will have a new indication. I would say in the next few years, we will be using some of these agents. Hopefully, there will be an improvement in OS, not just PFS.

TARGETED ONCOLOGY: What are the key messages for community oncologists treating patients with kidney cancer?

Nanus: [There are a] couple messages. The first is that the role of cytoreductive nephrectomy in patients with metastatic disease, and the concept that surgery is a big part of our care for patients with kidney cancer. Just because we have newer drugs doesn't mean we should stop doing surgery.

Secondly, there are a lot of trials, and you should refer your patients for clinical trials. There are adjuvant and neoadjuvant trials for high-risk patients. There are many early-stage patients that can just get surgery, but those more advanced T3 and T4 patients should be participating in a study. In select patients, you can have a discussion about adjuvant sunitinib therapy. It is a discussion with the patient. Some patients say they want to do everything possible. Oncologists still would like to see an OS benefit before they buy into it—myself included. However, there are select patients for whom the conversation should be had and immunotherapy should be considered.

Reference:

Ravaud A, Motzer RJ, Pandha HS, et al. Adjuvant sunitinib in high-risk renal-cell carcinoma after nephrectomy.N Engl J Med. 2016;375:2246-2254. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1611406.

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