Survival outcome and treatment response of patients with late relapse from renal cell carcinoma in the era of targeted therapy.
Authors
Nils Kroeger ; Toni K. Chouei ; Jae Lyn Lee ; Georg A. Bjarnason ; Jennifer J. Knox ; Mary J. MacKenzie ; Lori Wood ; Sandy Srinivas ; Ulka N. Vaishamayan ; Sun Young Rha ; Sumanta K. Pal ; Takeshi Yuasa ; Frede Donskov ; Neeraj Agarwal ; Min Han Tan ; Aristotelis Bamias ; Christian K. Kollmannsberger ; Scott A. North ; Brian I. Rini ; Daniel Y.C. Heng
BACKGROUND: A subset of primarily localized renal cell carcinoma (RCC) patients will experience disease recurrence ≥5 yr after initial nephrectomy.
OBJECTIVE: To characterize the clinical outcome of patients with late recurrence beyond 5 yr.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Patients with metastatic RCC (mRCC) treated with targeted therapy were retrospectively characterized according to time to relapse. Relapse was defined as the diagnosis of recurrent metastatic disease >3 mo after initial curative-intent nephrectomy. Patients with synchronous metastatic disease at presentation were excluded. Patients were classified as early relapsers (ERs) if they recurred within 5 yr; late relapsers (LRs) recurred after 5 yr.
OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Demographics were compared with the Student t test, the chi-square test, or the Fisher exact test. The survival time was estimated with the Kaplan-Meier method, and associations with survival outcome were assessed with univariable and multivariable Cox regression analyses.
RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS: Among 1210 mRCC patients treated with targeted therapy after surgery for localized disease, 897 (74%) relapsed within the first 5 yr and 313 (26%) (range: 5-35 yr) after 5 yr. LRs presented with younger age (p<0.0001), fewer with sarcomatoid features (p<0.0001), more clear cell histology (p=0.001), and lower Fuhrman grade (p<0.0001). Overall objective response rates to targeted therapy were better in LRs versus ERs (31.8% vs 26.5%; p=0.004). LRs had significantly longer progression-free survival (10.7 mo vs 8.5 mo; p=0.005) and overall survival (OS; 34.0 mo vs 27.4 mo; p=0.004). The study is limited by its retrospective design, noncentralized imaging and pathology review, missing information on metastatectomy, and nonstandardized follow-up protocols.
CONCLUSIONS: A quarter of patients who eventually developed metastatic disease and were treated with targeted therapy relapsed over 5 yr from initial nephrectomy. LRs have more favorable prognostic features and consequently better treatment response and OS.