| Literature DB >> 29147408 |
Mohan Hingorani1, Sanjay Dixit1, Anthony Maraveyas1.
Abstract
Pervious randomized studies have demonstrated survival benefit in favor of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) compared to cytokines in metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC). However, the role of TKIs for treating brain metastasis from RCC remains unknown. Previous studies have reported possible activity of sunitinib and sorafenib in RCC patients with brain metastasis. We report on patient with metastatic RCC who responded to first-line sunitinib but then progressed with multiple brain metastasis, but with controlled extra-cranial metastatic disease. The patient was treated with whole-brain palliative radiotherapy followed by treatment schedule of pazopanib at standard dose of 800 mg/day which was associated with a response in brain metastasis. Subsequently, she was re-challenged at reduced dose of 600 mg/day and developed further response in metastatic brain lesions. She lived for more than 3 years from initial diagnosis of brain metastasis. This is the first case report of sequential TKI therapy for treating metastatic RCC with brain metastasis and supports the probable use of pazopanib as potent TKI for treating patients with cerebral metastasis.Entities:
Keywords: Brain metastasis; Pazopanib; Renal cell cancer
Year: 2014 PMID: 29147408 PMCID: PMC5649772 DOI: 10.14740/wjon843w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Oncol ISSN: 1920-4531
Figure 1Patient developed response after first-line sunitinib therapy with complete resolution of (A) hilar lymphadenopathy (yellow arrow) and more than 50% reduction in size of (B) lung metastasis (yellow arrow).
Figure 2Patient developed response after pazopanib (800 mg/day) with resolution of brain metastasis. (A) Coronal T1-weighted scan with gadolinium contrast demonstrating small sub-centimeter contrast enhancing lesions (yellow arrow) on baseline MRI scan (left panel) that resolved after 3 months of pazopanib (right panel). (B) Axial T1-weighted baseline MRI scan with gadolinium showing small sub-centimeter metastasis (left panel) that resolved after 3 months of pazopanib (right panel).
Figure 3Patient developed response after re-challenge schedule of reduced-dose pazopanib (600 mg/day) with reduction in size of left parietal brain metastasis. (A) Coronal T1-weighted scan with gadolinium contrast demonstrating contrast enhancing lesions (yellow arrow) on baseline MRI scan (left panel) in left parietal region that resolved after 3 months of pazopanib (right panel). (B) Axial T1-weighted baseline MRI scan with gadolinium showing left parietal metastasis (left panel) that resolved after 3 months of pazopanib (right panel).