| Literature DB >> 26251610 |
Jamal Zekri1, Lydia M Dreosti2, Marwan Ghosn3, Emad Hamada4, Mohamed Jaloudi5, Ola Khorshid6, Blaha Larbaoui7.
Abstract
The management of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) has evolved considerably in recent years. This report represents the consensus of 22 relevant medical specialists from Africa and the Middle East region engaged in the management of RCC. Partial or radical nephrectomy is the standard of care for most patients with localized RCC. It is essential that patients are followed up appropriately after surgery to enable local and distant relapses to be identified and treated promptly. The treatment of advanced/metastatic disease has changed dramatically with the introduction of targeted therapies. Follow-up of these patients enables therapy optimization and assessment of response to treatment. There was universal agreement on the importance of management of RCC by a multidisciplinary team supported by a multidisciplinary tumor board. Barriers hindering this approach were identified. These included lack of awareness of the benefits of multidisciplinary team role, poor communication among relevant disciplines, time constraints, and specifics of private practice. Other challenges include shortage of expert specialists as urologists and oncologists and lack of local management guidelines in some countries. Solutions were proposed and discussed. Medical educational initiatives and awareness activities were highlighted as keys to encouraging cooperation between specialties to improve patients' outcome. Establishing combined genitourinary cancer clinics and formal referral systems should encourage a culture of effective communication. Joining forces with professionals in peripheral areas and the private sector is likely to help standardize care. Sustained action will be required to ensure that all patients with RCC in the region benefit from up-to-date care.Entities:
Keywords: Africa-Middle East; education; multidisciplinary; renal cell carcinoma
Year: 2015 PMID: 26251610 PMCID: PMC4524587 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S85538
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multidiscip Healthc ISSN: 1178-2390
First-line treatment for RCC: Phase III trials
| Treatment | Number | Prognostic group (%) | ORR (%) | Median PFS (months) | Median OS (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sunitinib vs | 375/375 | 38/56/6 | 47 vs 12 | 11 vs 5 | 26.4 vs 21.8 |
| IFN-α | 34/59/7 | ||||
| Bevacizumab + | 327/322 | 27/56/9 | 31 vs 13 | 10.4 vs 5.5 | 23.3 vs 21.3 |
| IFN-α vs IFN-α | 29/56/8 | NS | |||
| Bevacizumab + | 369/363 | 26/64/10 | 25.5 vs 13.1 | 8.4 vs 4.9 | 18.3 vs 17.4 |
| IFN-α vs IFN-α | 26/64/10 | NS | |||
| Pazopanib vs | 155/78 | 39/55/3 | 32 vs 4 | 11.1 vs 2.8 | 22.9 vs 20.5 |
| placebo | 39/53/3 | NS | |||
| Sunitinib vs | 553/557 | 27/59/9 | 25 vs 31 | 9.5 vs 8.4 | 29.1 vs 28.3 |
| pazopanib | 27/58/12 | Non-inferior | NS | ||
| Temsirolimus vs | 209/207 | –/31/69 | 8.6 vs 4.8 | 5.5 vs 3.1 | 10.9 vs 7.3 |
| IFN-α | –/24/76 | NS |
Note:
Total population.
Abbreviations: G, good; I, intermediate; IFN-α, interferon-alpha; NS, not significant; ORR, overall response rate; OS, overall survival; P, poor; PFS, progression-free survival; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; vs, versus.
Figure 1PFS in patients randomized to second-line treatment with axitinib or sorafenib. Reprinted from The Lancet Vol 378, Rini BI, Escudier B, Tomczak P, et al. Comparative effectiveness of axitinib versus sorafenib in advanced renal cell carcinoma (AXIS): a randomised phase 3 trial; 1931–1939, Copyright 2011, with permission from Elsevier.
Abbreviations: PFS, progression-free survival; CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio.
Barriers to multidisciplinary review and interdisciplinary referral
| Barriers to effective multidisciplinary cooperation | Poor communication |
| Specific barriers to referral from urologist/surgeon to oncologist | Lack of follow-up of patients after surgery |
| Specific barriers to referral of medically treated patients for surgery | Poor communication |
Multidisciplinary approach in Saudi Arabia: implementing good practice
| Experience in Saudi Arabia in implementing a multidisciplinary approach provides a valuable model for consideration and wider adoption. In major Saudi tertiary hospitals, a tumor board, consisting of urologists or uro-oncologists, genitourinary medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, a genitourinary pathologist, and an interventional radiologist, regularly meets to discuss all new and ongoing genitourinary cancer cases. All cases are documented and the agreed management plan signed. In some centers, the uro-oncologist, genitourinary medical oncologist, and radiation oncologist see patients in specialist multidisciplinary out-patient clinics in adjacent rooms to facilitate cooperation. Regular monthly city-wide meetings are held to provide a forum for discussion of difficult cases and management dilemmas as well as for providing an opportunity to share knowledge and experience. |
| There is also a nation-wide Saudi uro-oncology group, including all uro-oncologists, genitourinary medical oncologists, and radiation oncologists. This group organizes regular multidisciplinary meetings and educational activities, develops guidelines, and sponsors multidisciplinary research and has evolved into the National Uro-Oncology Society. |
| Educational activities in Saudi Arabia include an annual uro-oncology congress, an annual training course for senior residents, and an annual update course for practicing urologists and oncologists. The Saudi Genitourinary Cancers Guideline committee was formed in 2010 under the umbrella of the Saudi Oncology Society and the Saudi Urological Association and has published clinical management guidelines for RCC. |
Abbreviation: RCC, renal cell carcinoma.