Literature DB >> 31182090

Long-term response of metastatic hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma syndrome associated renal cell carcinoma to bevacizumab plus erlotinib after temsirolimus and axitinib treatment failures.

Inkeun Park1, Young Sup Shim2, Heounjeong Go3, Bum Sik Hong4, Jae Lyun Lee5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC) is a rare hereditary kidney cancer syndrome in which affected individuals are at risk of skin and uterine leiomyomatosis and kidney cancer. HLRCC-associated kidney cancer is a lethal disease with a highly aggressive behavior, and there is no standard treatment option for metastatic disease. CASE
PRESENTATION: Here, we report a 29-year-old patient with a locally advanced HLRCC-assiciated RCC. He was administrated temsirolimus initially, then underwent surgical removal of kidney, retroperitoneal lymph nodes, inferior vena cava and tumor thrombi. Unfortunately, multiple liver metastases were confirmed 1 month after surgery, so axitinib was given but failed immediately. We tried bevacizumab plus erlotinib, which achieved long-term good response lasting more than 18 months. He is alive with disease and maintains bevacizumab plus erlotinib treatment.
CONCLUSION: The promising results obtained in this patient suggest that combined bevacizumab plus erlotinib may offer a valid treatment option for advanced HLRCC-associated kidney cancer, even after failures of mTOR inhibitor and/or VEGFR TKI based therapies.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bevacizumab; Erlotinib; Hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma; Metastasis

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31182090      PMCID: PMC6558845          DOI: 10.1186/s12894-019-0484-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Urol        ISSN: 1471-2490            Impact factor:   2.264


Background

Hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC) syndrome is a rare autosomal-dominant hereditary syndrome caused by germline mutation in the fumarate hydratase (FH) gene [1]. The phenotypic manifestations of this syndrome include cutaneous leiomyomatosis, uterine leiomyomatosis, and renal cell carcinoma. Renal cell carcinoma in HLRCC has a penetrance rate of 10–20%, and used to be categorized as a form of type 2 papillary RCC, but now is classified separately as HLRCC-associated RCC [2]. This type of RCC is a lethal disease with tendencies toward early metastasis and rapid progression, and thus, immediate surgical excision is recommended after its detection even when tumors are small [3]. Currently, the only curative option for HLRCC-associated RCC is early detection by routine screening in affected individual and immediate surgery. No standard systemic treatment option is available for metastatic disease, though most medical oncologists prescribe vascular endothelial growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (VEGFR TKIs) or mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitors. Here we report a case of metastatic HLRCC-associated RCC, which exhibited long-term response to bevacizumab plus erlotinib after failure of temsirolimus and of axitinib.

Case presentation

A 29 year-old male presented a right flank mass and lower extremity edema in August 2015. He had no past medical history of illness, but a family history of uterine myoma in his sister, aunt, cousin, and grandmother and of skin leiomyomatosis in his grandmother, father, and uncle. His sister was later diagnosed with RCC in May 2016 (Fig. 1). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the abdomen revealed an 8 cm-sized mass in the right kidney that invaded the renal vein into infra-diaphragmatic IVC, obstructing and causing thrombosis of the infrarenal inferior vena cava and both iliac veins, with conglomerated lymph nodes (LNs) at retrocaval and aortocaval stations (Fig. 2a). Kidney mass biopsy revealed type 2 papillary renal cell carcinoma.
Fig. 1

Patient pedigree showing individuals with uterine myoma, skin leiomyoma, renal cysts, and renal cell carcinoma

Fig. 2

Serial CT and MRI images. a Axial fat saturated T1-weighted MRI image with contrast enhancement showing a lobulated contoured poorly enhancing tumor (arrow) in the right kidney. Tumor invasion was observed at IVC (arrow head) and metastatic lymph nodes (open arrow) were noted. b Despite temsirolimus treatment, primary tumor and metastatic lymph node size increased. c After radical nephrectomy, hepatic metastasis (arrowhead) was noted on a follow up CT scan, which (d) became aggravated despite axitinib therapy. e However, at 2 months after bevacizumab plus erlotinib therapy, the multiple hepatic metastases had nearly disappeared

Patient pedigree showing individuals with uterine myoma, skin leiomyoma, renal cysts, and renal cell carcinoma Serial CT and MRI images. a Axial fat saturated T1-weighted MRI image with contrast enhancement showing a lobulated contoured poorly enhancing tumor (arrow) in the right kidney. Tumor invasion was observed at IVC (arrow head) and metastatic lymph nodes (open arrow) were noted. b Despite temsirolimus treatment, primary tumor and metastatic lymph node size increased. c After radical nephrectomy, hepatic metastasis (arrowhead) was noted on a follow up CT scan, which (d) became aggravated despite axitinib therapy. e However, at 2 months after bevacizumab plus erlotinib therapy, the multiple hepatic metastases had nearly disappeared Because the massive thrombus and lymph nodes were deemed unresectable, he was administered temsirolimus from September 2015, but best response was stable disease. However, the primary mass and lymph node had enlarged in March 2016, indicating progressive disease (Fig. 2b). Because there is no standard treatment after temsirolimus in non-clear cell RCC and he maintained a good performance status, he underwent retroperitoneal lymph node dissection, IVC tumor thrombectomy, and radical nephrectomy in March 2016. Pathologic diagnosis was papillary type 2 RCC (Fig. 3). However, 1 month after surgery, follow-up CT demonstrated multiple liver metastases (Fig. 2c). Axitinib was started in May 2016, but the disease progressed, in liver, retroperitoneal LNs, and spine (Fig. 2d).
Fig. 3

Gross and histologic characteristics of the primary tumor. a Nephrectomy specimen, the 11.8x7x7 cm sized well-demarcated, multilobulated mass in the right kidney had a whitish yellow, soft, friable papillary cut surface with renal vein thrombi (arrow). b Renal tumors exhibited infiltrative, tubulopapillary architectural growth intermixed with tumoral renal parenchyma (× 40). c Tumors were composed of large cells with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm, large nuclei, and prominent inclusion-like eosinophilic nucleoli with perinuclear halos (× 400). d No expression of fumarate hydrate in tumor cells on immnohistochemical staining (× 200)

Gross and histologic characteristics of the primary tumor. a Nephrectomy specimen, the 11.8x7x7 cm sized well-demarcated, multilobulated mass in the right kidney had a whitish yellow, soft, friable papillary cut surface with renal vein thrombi (arrow). b Renal tumors exhibited infiltrative, tubulopapillary architectural growth intermixed with tumoral renal parenchyma (× 40). c Tumors were composed of large cells with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm, large nuclei, and prominent inclusion-like eosinophilic nucleoli with perinuclear halos (× 400). d No expression of fumarate hydrate in tumor cells on immnohistochemical staining (× 200) Considering his age at onset and family history of skin disease and uterine myoma, and tumor histology, HLRCC was suspected, and thus he and his family underwent germline FH mutation testing, which demonstrated the presence of mutation in FH exon 5 (c.688A > G, p.Lys230Glu). Although this specific mutation has not been reported in HLRCC, mutation in FH c. 689 A > G (p.Lys203Arg) had been reported to be pathogenic (rs752232718), and thus, we considered his kidney cancer was HLRCC-associated RCC. Immunohistochemical staining with anti-FH antibody (mousemonoclonal, clone J-13, 1:10000, SC-100743, SANTACRUZ, CA, USA) demonstrated no expression of FH in tumor cells (Fig. 3d). Based on a preliminary report, in which it was suggested bevacizumab and erlotinib in combination may be effective in HLRCC-associated RCC [4], we administrated bevacizumab (10 mg/kg every 2 weeks) and erlotinib (150 mg daily) from June 2016. After treatment, metastatic lesions in liver, LNs, and bone decreased rapidly, achieving partial response (Fig. 2e). As of Dec 2017, 18 months after start of bevacizumab plus erlotinib, this good response is maintained and the patient remains symptom free.

Discussion and conclusions

In this case, we report long lasting response to bevacizumab plus erlotinib after temsirolimus and axitinib had both failed. Currently, temsirolimus is the only treatment option in non-clear cell RCC (nccRCC) that prolonged overall survival (OS) in a randomized controlled phase 3 trial [5]. However, this trial was not specifically designed for nccRCC, and included mostly clear cell RCC patients with poor prognostic risk group (n = 502, 80%), while the remaining 20% was composed of non-clear cell or indeterminated histology RCC (n = 124, 20%). Although statistically significant, the efficacy of temsirolimus was not impressive in this trial, as median OS was 10.9 months in the temsirolimus group compared to 7.3 months in the interferon group. Other than temsirolimus, VEGFR TKI can be an option. The randomized phase 2 trials, A Randomized Phase II study of Afinitor vs. Sutent in Patients With Metastatic Non-Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma (ASPEN) and Everolimus Versus Sunitinib Prospective Evaluation in Metastatic Non-Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma (ESPN), showed sunitinib appears to be more effective and numerically better than everolimus in nccRCC [6, 7]. Although sunitinib is the most widely studied VEGFR TKI in patient with nccRCC, the best VEGFR TKI for nccRCC have not been determined, as phase II trials on pazopanib and axitinib for nccRCC showed similar or better outcome compared to sunitinib [8, 9]. Trials on temsirolimus and VEGFR TKIs were conducted on a mixture of nccRCC variants, which included sarcomatoid, papillary type 1, papillary type 2, chromophobe, unclassified, and MiT family translocation RCC. Furthermore, multi-omics has recently revealed these variants are completely different disease entities with unique molecular pathobiologies [10, 11]. Therefore, ideally, a genomics-based clinical trial is required to determine the best treatment option for each of nccRCC variants. As HLRCC-associated RCC is a very rare, it is unlikely that any large-scale clinical trial dedicated to this cancer will ever be performed. HLRCC is caused by a germline mutation in FH which encodes fumarate hydratase that converts fumarate into malate in the Krebs cycle. Consequently, HLRCC-associated RCC exhibits an impaired Krebs cycle and characteristic dependency on aerobic glycolysis. As fumarate accumulates, increased levels of fumarate inhibit hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) prolyl hydroxylase which facilitates degradation of HIF-1α and HIF-2α. As a result, stabilization of HIF-1α leads to increased level of VEGF and GLUT1, which are necessary for aerobic glycolysis [12]. A mechanism-based clinical trial of bevacizumab plus erlotinib in papillary renal cell carcinoma is currently underway (NCT01130519). Interim results are promising, especially in patients with HLRCC-associated RCC [4]; response rate and median progression-free survival were 29% and 7.4 months, respectively, in non-hereditary papillary RCC, whereas 60% and 24.2 months, respectively, in HLRCC-associated RCC. In conclusion, we suggest bevacizumab plus erlotinib be considered a treatment option in patients with metastatic HLRCC-associated RCC, even after failures of mTOR inhibitor and/or VEGFR TKI based therapies.
  11 in total

1.  Everolimus versus sunitinib for patients with metastatic non-clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ASPEN): a multicentre, open-label, randomised phase 2 trial.

Authors:  Andrew J Armstrong; Susan Halabi; Tim Eisen; Samuel Broderick; Walter M Stadler; Robert J Jones; Jorge A Garcia; Ulka N Vaishampayan; Joel Picus; Robert E Hawkins; John D Hainsworth; Christian K Kollmannsberger; Theodore F Logan; Igor Puzanov; Lisa M Pickering; Christopher W Ryan; Andrew Protheroe; Christine M Lusk; Sadie Oberg; Daniel J George
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2016-01-13       Impact factor: 41.316

Review 2.  Genetic predisposition to kidney cancer.

Authors:  Laura S Schmidt; W Marston Linehan
Journal:  Semin Oncol       Date:  2016-09-22       Impact factor: 4.929

3.  Spectrum of diverse genomic alterations define non-clear cell renal carcinoma subtypes.

Authors:  Steffen Durinck; Eric W Stawiski; Andrea Pavía-Jiménez; Zora Modrusan; Payal Kapur; Bijay S Jaiswal; Na Zhang; Vanina Toffessi-Tcheuyap; Thong T Nguyen; Kanika Bajaj Pahuja; Ying-Jiun Chen; Sadia Saleem; Subhra Chaudhuri; Sherry Heldens; Marlena Jackson; Samuel Peña-Llopis; Joseph Guillory; Karen Toy; Connie Ha; Corissa J Harris; Eboni Holloman; Haley M Hill; Jeremy Stinson; Celina Sanchez Rivers; Vasantharajan Janakiraman; Weiru Wang; Lisa N Kinch; Nick V Grishin; Peter M Haverty; Bernard Chow; Julian S Gehring; Jens Reeder; Gregoire Pau; Thomas D Wu; Vitaly Margulis; Yair Lotan; Arthur Sagalowsky; Ivan Pedrosa; Frederic J de Sauvage; James Brugarolas; Somasekar Seshagiri
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2014-11-17       Impact factor: 38.330

4.  Everolimus Versus Sunitinib Prospective Evaluation in Metastatic Non-Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma (ESPN): A Randomized Multicenter Phase 2 Trial.

Authors:  Nizar M Tannir; Eric Jonasch; Laurence Albiges; Emre Altinmakas; Chaan S Ng; Surena F Matin; Xuemei Wang; Wei Qiao; Zita Dubauskas Lim; Pheroze Tamboli; Priya Rao; Kanishka Sircar; Jose A Karam; David F McDermott; Christopher G Wood; Toni K Choueiri
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2015-11-26       Impact factor: 20.096

Review 5.  The 2016 WHO Classification of Tumours of the Urinary System and Male Genital Organs-Part A: Renal, Penile, and Testicular Tumours.

Authors:  Holger Moch; Antonio L Cubilla; Peter A Humphrey; Victor E Reuter; Thomas M Ulbright
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2016-02-28       Impact factor: 20.096

6.  Temsirolimus, interferon alfa, or both for advanced renal-cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Gary Hudes; Michael Carducci; Piotr Tomczak; Janice Dutcher; Robert Figlin; Anil Kapoor; Elzbieta Staroslawska; Jeffrey Sosman; David McDermott; István Bodrogi; Zoran Kovacevic; Vladimir Lesovoy; Ingo G H Schmidt-Wolf; Olga Barbarash; Erhan Gokmen; Timothy O'Toole; Stephanie Lustgarten; Laurence Moore; Robert J Motzer
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2007-05-31       Impact factor: 91.245

Review 7.  Molecular pathways: Fumarate hydratase-deficient kidney cancer--targeting the Warburg effect in cancer.

Authors:  W Marston Linehan; Tracey A Rouault
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2013-04-30       Impact factor: 12.531

8.  Comprehensive Molecular Characterization of Papillary Renal-Cell Carcinoma.

Authors:  W Marston Linehan; Paul T Spellman; Christopher J Ricketts; Chad J Creighton; Suzanne S Fei; Caleb Davis; David A Wheeler; Bradley A Murray; Laura Schmidt; Cathy D Vocke; Myron Peto; Abu Amar M Al Mamun; Eve Shinbrot; Anurag Sethi; Samira Brooks; W Kimryn Rathmell; Angela N Brooks; Katherine A Hoadley; A Gordon Robertson; Denise Brooks; Reanne Bowlby; Sara Sadeghi; Hui Shen; Daniel J Weisenberger; Moiz Bootwalla; Stephen B Baylin; Peter W Laird; Andrew D Cherniack; Gordon Saksena; Scott Haake; Jun Li; Han Liang; Yiling Lu; Gordon B Mills; Rehan Akbani; Mark D M Leiserson; Benjamin J Raphael; Pavana Anur; Donald Bottaro; Laurence Albiges; Nandita Barnabas; Toni K Choueiri; Bogdan Czerniak; Andrew K Godwin; A Ari Hakimi; Thai H Ho; James Hsieh; Michael Ittmann; William Y Kim; Bhavani Krishnan; Maria J Merino; Kenna R Mills Shaw; Victor E Reuter; Ed Reznik; Carl S Shelley; Brian Shuch; Sabina Signoretti; Ramaprasad Srinivasan; Pheroze Tamboli; George Thomas; Satish Tickoo; Kenneth Burnett; Daniel Crain; Johanna Gardner; Kevin Lau; David Mallery; Scott Morris; Joseph D Paulauskis; Robert J Penny; Candace Shelton; W Troy Shelton; Mark Sherman; Eric Thompson; Peggy Yena; Melissa T Avedon; Jay Bowen; Julie M Gastier-Foster; Mark Gerken; Kristen M Leraas; Tara M Lichtenberg; Nilsa C Ramirez; Tracie Santos; Lisa Wise; Erik Zmuda; John A Demchok; Ina Felau; Carolyn M Hutter; Margi Sheth; Heidi J Sofia; Roy Tarnuzzer; Zhining Wang; Liming Yang; Jean C Zenklusen; Jiashan Zhang; Brenda Ayala; Julien Baboud; Sudha Chudamani; Jia Liu; Laxmi Lolla; Rashi Naresh; Todd Pihl; Qiang Sun; Yunhu Wan; Ye Wu; Adrian Ally; Miruna Balasundaram; Saianand Balu; Rameen Beroukhim; Tom Bodenheimer; Christian Buhay; Yaron S N Butterfield; Rebecca Carlsen; Scott L Carter; Hsu Chao; Eric Chuah; Amanda Clarke; Kyle R Covington; Mahmoud Dahdouli; Ninad Dewal; Noreen Dhalla; Harsha V Doddapaneni; Jennifer A Drummond; Stacey B Gabriel; Richard A Gibbs; Ranabir Guin; Walker Hale; Alicia Hawes; D Neil Hayes; Robert A Holt; Alan P Hoyle; Stuart R Jefferys; Steven J M Jones; Corbin D Jones; Divya Kalra; Christie Kovar; Lora Lewis; Jie Li; Yussanne Ma; Marco A Marra; Michael Mayo; Shaowu Meng; Matthew Meyerson; Piotr A Mieczkowski; Richard A Moore; Donna Morton; Lisle E Mose; Andrew J Mungall; Donna Muzny; Joel S Parker; Charles M Perou; Jeffrey Roach; Jacqueline E Schein; Steven E Schumacher; Yan Shi; Janae V Simons; Payal Sipahimalani; Tara Skelly; Matthew G Soloway; Carrie Sougnez; Angela Tam; Donghui Tan; Nina Thiessen; Umadevi Veluvolu; Min Wang; Matthew D Wilkerson; Tina Wong; Junyuan Wu; Liu Xi; Jane Zhou; Jason Bedford; Fengju Chen; Yao Fu; Mark Gerstein; David Haussler; Katayoon Kasaian; Phillip Lai; Shiyun Ling; Amie Radenbaugh; David Van Den Berg; John N Weinstein; Jingchun Zhu; Monique Albert; Iakovina Alexopoulou; Jeremiah J Andersen; J Todd Auman; John Bartlett; Sheldon Bastacky; Julie Bergsten; Michael L Blute; Lori Boice; Roni J Bollag; Jeff Boyd; Erik Castle; Ying-Bei Chen; John C Cheville; Erin Curley; Benjamin Davies; April DeVolk; Rajiv Dhir; Laura Dike; John Eckman; Jay Engel; Jodi Harr; Ronald Hrebinko; Mei Huang; Lori Huelsenbeck-Dill; Mary Iacocca; Bruce Jacobs; Michael Lobis; Jodi K Maranchie; Scott McMeekin; Jerome Myers; Joel Nelson; Jeremy Parfitt; Anil Parwani; Nicholas Petrelli; Brenda Rabeno; Somak Roy; Andrew L Salner; Joel Slaton; Melissa Stanton; R Houston Thompson; Leigh Thorne; Kelinda Tucker; Paul M Weinberger; Cynthia Winemiller; Leigh Anne Zach; Rosemary Zuna
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2015-11-04       Impact factor: 91.245

9.  Pazopanib for the Treatment of Non-clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma: A Single-Arm, Open-Label, Multicenter, Phase II Study.

Authors:  Ki Sun Jung; Su Jin Lee; Se Hoon Park; Jae-Lyun Lee; Se-Hoon Lee; Jae Yun Lim; Jung Hun Kang; Suee Lee; Sun Young Rha; Kyung Hee Lee; Ho Young Kim; Ho Yeong Lim
Journal:  Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2017-05-22       Impact factor: 4.679

Review 10.  Hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Laura S Schmidt; W Marston Linehan
Journal:  Int J Nephrol Renovasc Dis       Date:  2014-06-20
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Review 2.  Advances in hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC) research.

Authors:  Aikseng Ooi
Journal:  Semin Cancer Biol       Date:  2019-11-02       Impact factor: 15.707

3.  Cyst(e)inase-Rapamycin Combination Induces Ferroptosis in Both In Vitro and In Vivo Models of Hereditary Leiomyomatosis and Renal Cell Cancer.

Authors:  Baris Kerimoglu; Candice Lamb; Ryan D McPherson; Ergul Ergen; Everett M Stone; Aikseng Ooi
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2022-03-01       Impact factor: 6.009

4.  Mining Drug-Target Associations in Cancer: Analysis of Gene Expression and Drug Activity Correlations.

Authors:  Monica M Arroyo; Alberto Berral-González; Santiago Bueno-Fortes; Diego Alonso-López; Javier De Las Rivas
Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2020-04-25

5.  Genotypic and Phenotypic Characteristics of Hereditary Leiomyomatosis and Renal Cell Cancer Syndrome in Korean Patients.

Authors:  Ja Young Seo; Jeong-Yeal Ahn; Bhumsuk Keam; Miso Kim; Shinkyo Yoon; Jae Lyun Lee; Kwonoh Park; Inkeun Park
Journal:  Ann Lab Med       Date:  2021-03-01       Impact factor: 3.464

6.  Hereditary Leiomyomatosis and Renal Cell Cancer.

Authors:  Anders Würgler Hansen; Zahràa Chayed; Kristine Pallesen; Ileana Codruta Vasilescu; Anette Bygum
Journal:  Acta Derm Venereol       Date:  2020-01-07       Impact factor: 3.875

7.  Prevalence of pathogenic variants in DNA damage response and repair genes in patients undergoing cancer risk assessment and reporting a personal history of early-onset renal cancer.

Authors:  Tiffiney R Hartman; Elena V Demidova; Randy W Lesh; Lily Hoang; Marcy Richardson; Andrea Forman; Lisa Kessler; Virginia Speare; Erica A Golemis; Michael J Hall; Mary B Daly; Sanjeevani Arora
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-08-11       Impact factor: 4.379

8.  A Case of Metastatic Hereditary Leiomyomatosis and Renal Cell Cancer Syndrome-Associated Renal Cell Carcinoma Treated with a Sequence of Axitinib and Nivolumab Following Cytoreductive Nephrectomy.

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Journal:  J Kidney Cancer VHL       Date:  2020-07-20
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