Literature DB >> 28286925

Cabozantinib for Renal Cell Carcinoma: Current and Future Paradigms.

Ahmed Abdelaziz1, Ulka Vaishampayan2.   

Abstract

OPINION STATEMENT: Cabozantinib was approved by the FDA in April 2016 for the treatment of advanced renal cancer, pretreated with at least one prior antiangiogenic therapy. This is the first agent in the therapy of kidney cancer to show a statistically significant improvement in all three endpoints of clinical efficacy, response rate, progression free survival, and overall survival (OS), in a phase III randomized trial. The reporting of METEOR coincided with that of the Checkmate 025 study which randomized similarly eligible patients to receive nivolumab or everolimus 10 mg daily. As the drug development has occurred in parallel for cabozantinib and nivolumab, no evidence exists for decision making regarding optimal sequencing of these agents. A third option of lenvatinib and everolimus was also rapidly approved based on a phase II randomized trial demonstrating promising magnitude of improvement in response, progression-free survival (PFS), and OS. The differences in toxicity profiles, duration and toxicities of prior therapy, presence of brain metastases, concomitant immunosuppressive therapies, or autoimmune conditions are the factors that are taken into account when choosing therapy. The patients who have demonstrated response, prolonged clinical benefit and tolerability, and with anti-VEGF therapy are likely to benefit from continued antiangiogenic activity combined with MET and HGF inhibition with cabozantinib at progression. The patients who have intolerance or poor response to anti-VEGF TKI should be switched to nivolumab as the preferential therapy of choice. Clearly, better predictors are required to aid in guiding therapeutic decisions. The CABOSUN trial will likely shift the entire paradigm. The CABOSUN trial demonstrated superior PFS and response rates favoring cabozantinib as compared to sunitinib in untreated, intermediate, or poor-risk RCC and can be predicted to become the front-line therapy of choice. Immune-based regimens such as the combinations of nivolumab + ipilimumab and bevacizumab + atezolizumab have completed phase III trials, comparing to sunitinib, and results are awaited. In the future, a similar clinical dilemma will be shifted to the front-line therapy and the nuances of trial eligibility, and patient comorbidities will remain important factors. Optimal sequencing and predictive biomarkers are the questions that need to be incorporated in future clinical trials within RCC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cabozantinib; MET; METEOR; Renal cell carcinoma; mRCC; targeted therapy

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28286925      PMCID: PMC6854754          DOI: 10.1007/s11864-017-0444-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Treat Options Oncol        ISSN: 1534-6277


  38 in total

1.  Effect of Renal and Hepatic Impairment on the Pharmacokinetics of Cabozantinib.

Authors:  Linh Nguyen; Jaymes Holland; David Ramies; Richard Mamelok; Natacha Benrimoh; Sabrina Ciric; Thomas Marbury; Richard A Preston; Douglas M Heuman; Edith Gavis; Steven Lacy
Journal:  J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2016-03-23       Impact factor: 3.126

2.  Cabozantinib versus Everolimus in Advanced Renal-Cell Carcinoma.

Authors:  Toni K Choueiri; Bernard Escudier; Thomas Powles; Paul N Mainwaring; Brian I Rini; Frede Donskov; Hans Hammers; Thomas E Hutson; Jae-Lyun Lee; Katriina Peltola; Bruce J Roth; Georg A Bjarnason; Lajos Géczi; Bhumsuk Keam; Pablo Maroto; Daniel Y C Heng; Manuela Schmidinger; Philip W Kantoff; Anne Borgman-Hagey; Colin Hessel; Christian Scheffold; Gisela M Schwab; Nizar M Tannir; Robert J Motzer
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2015-09-25       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Evaluation of the effect of food and gastric pH on the single-dose pharmacokinetics of cabozantinib in healthy adult subjects.

Authors:  Linh Nguyen; Jaymes Holland; Richard Mamelok; Marie-Kristine Laberge; Julie Grenier; Dennis Swearingen; Danielle Armas; Steven Lacy
Journal:  J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2015-06-26       Impact factor: 3.126

Review 4.  Renal-cell carcinoma.

Authors:  R J Motzer; N H Bander; D M Nanus
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1996-09-19       Impact factor: 91.245

5.  Sunitinib versus interferon alfa in metastatic renal-cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Robert J Motzer; Thomas E Hutson; Piotr Tomczak; M Dror Michaelson; Ronald M Bukowski; Olivier Rixe; Stéphane Oudard; Sylvie Negrier; Cezary Szczylik; Sindy T Kim; Isan Chen; Paul W Bycott; Charles M Baum; Robert A Figlin
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2007-01-11       Impact factor: 91.245

6.  Cabozantinib (XL184), a novel MET and VEGFR2 inhibitor, simultaneously suppresses metastasis, angiogenesis, and tumor growth.

Authors:  F Michael Yakes; Jason Chen; Jenny Tan; Kyoko Yamaguchi; Yongchang Shi; Peiwen Yu; Fawn Qian; Felix Chu; Frauke Bentzien; Belinda Cancilla; Jessica Orf; Andrew You; A Douglas Laird; Stefan Engst; Lillian Lee; Justin Lesch; Yu-Chien Chou; Alison H Joly
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2011-09-16       Impact factor: 6.261

7.  External validation and comparison with other models of the International Metastatic Renal-Cell Carcinoma Database Consortium prognostic model: a population-based study.

Authors:  Daniel Y C Heng; Wanling Xie; Meredith M Regan; Lauren C Harshman; Georg A Bjarnason; Ulka N Vaishampayan; Mary Mackenzie; Lori Wood; Frede Donskov; Min-Han Tan; Sun-Young Rha; Neeraj Agarwal; Christian Kollmannsberger; Brian I Rini; Toni K Choueiri
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2013-01-09       Impact factor: 41.316

8.  Cancer incidence and mortality worldwide: sources, methods and major patterns in GLOBOCAN 2012.

Authors:  Jacques Ferlay; Isabelle Soerjomataram; Rajesh Dikshit; Sultan Eser; Colin Mathers; Marise Rebelo; Donald Maxwell Parkin; David Forman; Freddie Bray
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2014-10-09       Impact factor: 7.396

9.  Phase 1 dose escalation trial of the safety and pharmacokinetics of cabozantinib concurrent with temozolomide and radiotherapy or temozolomide after radiotherapy in newly diagnosed patients with high-grade gliomas.

Authors:  David Schiff; Annick Desjardins; Timothy Cloughesy; Thomas Mikkelsen; Michael Glantz; Marc C Chamberlain; David A Reardon; Patrick Y Wen
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2015-11-20       Impact factor: 6.860

Review 10.  c-Met as a Target for Personalized Therapy.

Authors:  Ingrid Garajová; Elisa Giovannetti; Guido Biasco; Godefridus J Peters
Journal:  Transl Oncogenomics       Date:  2015-11-23
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  4 in total

1.  Synergistic Effects of Cabozantinib and EGFR-Specific CAR-NK-92 Cells in Renal Cell Carcinoma.

Authors:  Qing Zhang; Kang Tian; Jinjing Xu; Haixu Zhang; Liantao Li; Qiang Fu; Dafei Chai; Huizhong Li; Junnian Zheng
Journal:  J Immunol Res       Date:  2017-12-20       Impact factor: 4.818

Review 2.  The Changing Therapeutic Landscape of Metastatic Renal Cancer.

Authors:  Javier C Angulo; Oleg Shapiro
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2019-08-22       Impact factor: 6.639

Review 3.  Inhibiting TRK Proteins in Clinical Cancer Therapy.

Authors:  Allison M Lange; Hui-Wen Lo
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2018-04-04       Impact factor: 6.639

Review 4.  Cancer stem cell secretome in the tumor microenvironment: a key point for an effective personalized cancer treatment.

Authors:  Julia López de Andrés; Carmen Griñán-Lisón; Gema Jiménez; Juan Antonio Marchal
Journal:  J Hematol Oncol       Date:  2020-10-15       Impact factor: 17.388

  4 in total

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