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Characterization of Patients With Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma Experiencing Complete Response to First-line Therapies: Results From the International Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma Database Consortium

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Abstract
Purpose: Clinical trials have demonstrated higher complete response rates in the immuno-oncology-based combination arms than in the tyrosine kinase inhibitor arms in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma. We aimed to characterize real-world patients who experienced complete response to the contemporary first-line therapies.

Materials and methods: Using the International Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma Database Consortium, response-evaluable patients who received frontline immuno-oncology-based combination therapy or tyrosine kinase inhibitor monotherapy were analyzed. Baseline characteristics of patients and post-landmark overall survival were compared based on best overall response, as per RECIST 1.1.

Results: A total of 52 (4.6%) of 1,126 and 223 (3.0%) of 7,557 patients experienced complete response to immuno-oncology-based and tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapies, respectively (P = .005). An adjusted odds ratio for complete response achieved by immuno-oncology-based combination therapy (vs tyrosine kinase inhibitor monotherapy) was 1.56 (95% CI 1.11-2.17; P = .009). Among patients who experienced complete response, the immuno-oncology-based cohort had a higher proportion of non-clear cell histology (15.9% and 4.7%; P = .016), sarcomatoid dedifferentiation (29.8% and 13.5%; P = .014), and multiple sites of metastases (80.4% and 50.0%; P < .001) than the tyrosine kinase inhibitor cohort. Complete response was independently associated with post-landmark overall survival benefit in both the immuno-oncology-based and tyrosine kinase inhibitor cohorts, giving respective adjusted hazard ratios of 0.17 (95% CI 0.04-0.72; P = .016) and 0.28 (95% CI 0.21-0.38; P < .001).

Conclusions: The complete response rate was not as high in the real-world population as in the clinical trial population. Among those who experienced complete response, several adverse clinicopathological features were more frequently observed in the immuno-oncology-based cohort than in the tyrosine kinase inhibitor cohort. Complete response was an indicator of favorable overall survival.
Author(s)
3/7 epub
Issued Date
2023
Kosuke Takemura
Vishal Navani
Matthew S Ernst
J Connor Wells
Luis Meza
Sumanta K Pal
Jae-Lyun Lee
Haoran Li
Neeraj Agarwal
Ajjai S Alva
Aaron R Hansen
Naveen S Basappa
Bernadett Szabados
Thomas Powles
Ben Tran
Christopher M Hocking
Benoit Beuselinck
Takeshi Yuasa
Toni K Choueiri
Daniel Y C Heng
Type
Article
Keyword
carcinomarenal cellimmune checkpoint inhibitorsprognosisreceptorsremission inductionvascular endothelial growth factor
DOI
10.1097/JU.0000000000003132
URI
https://oak.ulsan.ac.kr/handle/2021.oak/16589
Publisher
JOURNAL OF UROLOGY
Language
영어
ISSN
0022-5347
Citation Volume
209
Citation Number
4
Citation Start Page
1
Citation End Page
9
Appears in Collections:
Medicine > Nursing
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