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First-line Mammalian target of rapamycin inhibition in metastatic renal cell carcinoma: an analysis of practice patterns from the International Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma Database Consortium.

Authors
 Lauren C. Harshman  ;  Nils Kroeger  ;  Sun Young Rha  ;  Frede Donskov  ;  Lori Wood  ;  Srinivas K. Tantravahi  ;  Ulka Vaishampayan  ;  Brian I. Rini  ;  Jennifer Knox  ;  Scott North  ;  Scott Ernst  ;  Takeshi Yuasa  ;  Sandy Srinivas  ;  Sumanta Pal  ;  Daniel Y. Heng  ;  Toni K. Choueiri 
Citation
 CLINICAL GENITOURINARY CANCER, Vol.12(5) : 335-340, 2014 
Journal Title
CLINICAL GENITOURINARY CANCER
ISSN
 1558-7673 
Issue Date
2014
MeSH
Antineoplastic Agents/therapeutic use ; Carcinoma, Renal Cell/drug therapy* ; Carcinoma, Renal Cell/mortality ; Databases, Factual ; Disease-Free Survival ; Everolimus ; Female ; Humans ; Kidney Neoplasms/drug therapy* ; Kidney Neoplasms/mortality ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Practice Patterns, Physicians' ; Protein Kinase Inhibitors/therapeutic use* ; Retrospective Studies ; Sirolimus/analogs & derivatives ; Sirolimus/therapeutic use ; TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors* ; Treatment Outcome
Keywords
Everolimus ; Targeted therapy ; Temsirolimus ; Treatment-naive ; mTOR inhibitor
Abstract
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND: Approval of the mTOR inhibitors for the treatment of mRCC was based on efficacy in poor-risk patients in the first-line setting for temsirolimus and in vascular endothelial growth factor inhibitor-refractory patients for everolimus. We strove to characterize temsirolimus and everolimus use and effectiveness in the first-line setting.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: We performed a retrospective database analysis of mRCC patients who received mTOR inhibitors as first-line targeted therapy. The Kaplan-Meier product-limit method was used to estimate the distribution of progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS).
RESULTS: We identified 127 mRCC patients who had received a first-line mTOR inhibitor. Temsirolimus was administered in 93 patients (73%) and everolimus in 34 patients (27%). The main reasons for choice of temsirolimus were poor-risk disease (38%), non-clear cell histology (27%), and clinical trial availability (15%), whereas clinical trial (82%) and non-clear cell histology (6%) drove everolimus selection. Of the temsirolimus and everolimus patients, 58% and 32% were poor-risk according to the International mRCC Database Consortium criteria, respectively. The median PFS and OS were 3.4 and 12.5 months and 4.8 and 15.9 months with temsirolimus and everolimus, respectively. Although limited by small numbers, this study characterizes a real-world, international experience with the use of mTOR inhibition in treatment-naive mRCC patients.
CONCLUSION: Poor-risk RCC, non-clear cell histology, and clinical trials were the predominant reasons for mTOR inhibitor selection in the front-line setting. Because of the different patient populations in which they were administered, direct comparisons of the front-line efficacy of temsirolimus and everolimus cannot be made.
Files in This Item:
T201404213.pdf Download
DOI
10.1016/j.clgc.2014.03.003
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Internal Medicine (내과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Rha, Sun Young(라선영) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2512-4531
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/138268
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