Penn Medicine Physician Finds No Preventive Benefits for Widely Used Kidney Cancer Drugs
Two widely used targeted therapy drugs— approved by the FDA for use in metastatic kidney cancer —are no more effective than a placebo in preventing return of the disease to increase life spans of patients suffering from advanced kidney cancer after surgery, according to new results to be presented by a researcher at the University of Pennsylvania’s Abramson Cancer Center (ACC) during the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium.
Lead researcher Naomi B. Haas, MD, associate professor in the Division of Hematology/Oncology and director of the Prostate and Kidney Cancer Program at the ACC, and her colleagues in the ECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group (ECOG-ACRIN) treated 1,943 patients in the United States and Canada with one year of sorafenib, sunitinib, or a placebo drug after surgery to resect (cut out) their kidney tumors. The phase III study found no difference in median years of disease-free survival in the adjuvant setting: 5.6 years for sunitinib; 5.6 years for sorafenib; and 5.7 years for placebos.
The findings are one of five abstracts featured in a presscast on Monday, February 23 at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium, which is co-sponsored by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, the American Society for Radiation Oncology, and the Society of Urologic Oncology. The Symposium will take place February 26-28 in Orlando.
While surgery is typically the best initial treatment for renal tumors, surgical resection alone is not enough to prevent return of the disease in many patients. Adjuvant therapies (applied after initial treatment with the goal of suppressing secondary tumor formation) are often needed to improve survival.
Sunitinib and sorafenib are examples of adjuvant therapies known as kinase inhibitors. Kinases are proteins on or near the surface of cells; they help cancer grow and survive. Kinase inhibitors block the growth of kinases and associated blood vessels which nourish cancers. Sorafenib and sunitinib, which are taken in pill form on a daily basis, are thought to block different kinases.
Both drugs have been shown to be effective when kidney cancer has spread to other parts of the body. Could they also be effective in preventing recurrence of the disease?
“The current standard of care for these patients is close observation,” Haas said. “Unfortunately, we found that the use of sunitinib or sorafenib in this setting did not reduce the incidence of recurrence as compared to placebo. Fortunately, the use of these drugs in this setting did not appear to make the outcome of patients receiving them any worse.”
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