| Literature DB >> 29134564 |
E Gallardo1, M J Méndez-Vidal2, J L Pérez-Gracia3, J M Sepúlveda-Sánchez4, M Campayo5, I Chirivella-González6, X García-Del-Muro7, A González-Del-Alba8, E Grande9, C Suárez10.
Abstract
The goal of this article is to provide recommendations about the management of kidney cancer. Based on pathologic and molecular features, several kidney cancer variants were described. Nephron-sparing techniques are the gold standard of localized disease. After a randomized trial, sunitinib could be considered in adjuvant treatment in high-risk patients. Patients with advanced disease constitute a heterogeneous population. Prognostic classification should be considered. Both sunitinib and pazopanib are the standard options for first-line systemic therapy in advanced renal cell carcinoma. Based on the results of two randomized trials, both nivolumab and cabozantinib should be considered the standard for second and further lines of therapy. Response evaluation for present therapies is a challenge.Entities:
Keywords: Kidney cancer; Molecular pathology; Systemic therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29134564 PMCID: PMC5785618 DOI: 10.1007/s12094-017-1765-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Oncol ISSN: 1699-048X Impact factor: 3.405
Levels of evidence/grades of recommendation
| Levels of evidence |
| I Evidence from at least one large randomized, controlled trial of good methodological quality (low potential for bias) or meta-analyses of well-conducted randomized trials without heterogeneity |
| II Small randomized trials or large randomized trials with a suspicion of bias (lower methodological quality) or meta-analyses of such trials or of trials with demonstrated heterogeneity |
| III Prospective cohort studies |
| IV Retrospective cohort studies or case–control studies |
| V Studies without control group, case reports, experts opinions |
| Grades of recommendation |
| A Strong evidence for efficacy with a substantial clinical benefit, strongly recommended |
| B Strong or moderate evidence for efficacy but with a limited clinical benefit, generally recommended |
| C Insufficient evidence for efficacy or benefit does not outweigh the risk or the disadvantages; optional |
| D Moderate evidence against efficacy or for adverse outcome, generally not recommended |
| E Strong evidence against efficacy or for adverse outcome, never recommended |
Kidney cancer TNM staging AJCC UICC 2017
|
| |
| T category | T criteria |
| TX | Primary tumor cannot be assessed |
| T0 | No evidence of primary tumor |
| T1 | Tumor ≤ 7 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the kidney |
| T1a | Tumor ≤ 4 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the kidney |
| T1b | Tumor > 4 cm but ≤ 7 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the kidney |
| T2 | Tumor > 7 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the kidney |
| T2a | Tumor > 7 cm but ≤ 10 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the kidney |
| T2b | Tumor > 10 cm, limited to the kidney |
| T3 | Tumor extends into major veins or perinephric tissues, but not into the ipsilateral adrenal gland and not beyond Gerota’s fascia |
| T3a | Tumor extends into the renal vein or its segmental branches, or invades the pelvicalyceal system, or invades perirenal and/or renal sinus fat but not beyond Gerota’s fascia |
| T3b | Tumor extends into the vena cava below the diaphragm |
| T3c | Tumor extends into the vena cava above the diaphragm or invades the wall of the vena cava |
| T4 | Tumor invades beyond Gerota’s fascia (including contiguous extension into the ipsilateral adrenal gland) |
|
| |
| N category | N criteria |
| Nx | Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed |
| N0 | No regional lymph node metastasis |
| N1 | Metastasis in regional lymph node(s) |
|
| |
| M category | M criteria |
| M0 | No distant metastasis |
| M1 | Distant metastasis |
Stage grouping for RCC based on AJCC TNM 2017
| Stage | T | N | M |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | T1 | N0 | M0 |
| II | T2 | N0 | M0 |
| III | T1 or 2 | N1 | M0 |
| T3 | Any N | M0 | |
| IV | T4 | Any N | M0 |
| Any T | Any N | M1 |
MSKCC and IMDC risk criteria for poor overall survival
| MSKCC criteria | IMDC criteria |
|---|---|
| KPS < 80 | KPS < 80 |
| Diagnosis to therapy < 1 year | Diagnosis to therapy < 1 year |
| Anemia | Anemia |
| Hypercalcemia | Hypercalcemia |
| Elevated lactate dehydrogenase | Thrombocytosis |
| Neutrophilia |
For both classifications:
0 factors: favorable risk
1–2 factors: intermediate risk
3 or more factors: poor risk
SEOM guideline recommendations for kidney cancer
| Diagnosis and staging |
| Abdominal CT scan is the gold standard for staging of RCC and provides information on primary, regional and metastatic involvement. Level of evidence: III. Grade of recommendation: A |
| Abdominal MRI is an alternative in several circumstances. Chest CT is recommended for thorax staging. Bone scan and brain studies are not routinely recommended. Level of evidence: III. Grade of recommendation: B |
| Local and locoregional disease |
| Partial nephrectomy is recommended in T1 tumors, if technically feasible, as well as in bilateral tumors or a single functional kidney. Radical nephrectomy is recommended in T2-4 tumors. Level of evidence: III. Grade of recommendation: A |
| Adjuvant therapy with sunitinib over 1 year after nephrectomy could be an option to consider individually in patients with high-risk features. However, there is still insufficient evidence to recommend this therapy routinely in clinical practice. Level of evidence: II. Grade of recommendation: C |
| Prognostic classification |
| Prognostic classifications, such as MSKCC and IMDC, should be used for management of mRCC patients. Level of evidence: II. Grade of recommendation: B |
| Surgery in advanced disease |
| Debulking or cytoreductive nephrectomy is the standard of care for selected mRCC patients with good or intermediate prognosis, however this procedure should be avoided in the majority of patients with poor-risk features. Level of evidence: III. Grade of recommendation: B |
| Metastasectomy can be considered in selected patients with limited number of metastases with long metachronous disease-free interval Level of evidence: III. Grade of recommendation: B |
| First-line treatment in advanced disease |
| In patients with good or intermediate prognosis, sunitinib and pazopanib are the most recommended options for the first-line treatment of mRCC with clear-cell histology. Level of evidence: I.,Grade of recommendation: A |
| For patients with poor prognosis, temsirolimus is the only option supported by a phase III trial. Level of evidence: I. Grade of recommendation: A |
| Sunitinib and pazopanib have also shown benefit in the treatment of poor-prognosis patients. Level of evidence: III. Grade of recommendation: B |
| Second-line treatment in advanced disease |
| Nivolumab and cabozantinib have shown increased OS in patients with advanced ccRCC previously treated with antiangiogenics, and are the recommended treatments for these patients. Level of evidence: I. Grade of recommendation: A |
| Decisions to use either agent may be based on the expected toxicity and on contraindications for each drug, as randomized data is lacking. Level of evidence: IV. Grade of recommendation: D |
| Lenvatinib in combination with everolimus has shown increased OS in patients with advanced ccRCC in a randomized phase II trial, and is another valid alternative for these patients. Level of evidence: II. Grade of recommendation: B |
| Axitinib and everolimus have not shown increased OS after prior antiangiogenic therapy and should not be used before the previous agents. Nevertheless they may remain acceptable options following such agents, although they have not been tested in randomized trials in this setting. Level of evidence: II. Grade of recommendation: B |
| Non-clear cell renal cell carcinoma |
| VEGFR inhibitors, such as sunitinib, are the preferred option for papillary RCC. Level of evidence: II. Grade of recommendation: B |
| Response evaluation and follow-up |
| After a definitive treatment for a localized renal cell carcinoma a follow up should be planned. Level of evidence: V. Grade of recommendation: B |