Department of Urology, The Netherlands Cancer Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Eur Urol. 2010 Dec;58(6):819-28. doi: 10.1016/j.eururo.2010.08.029. Epub 2010 Aug 27.
Surgical intervention is the primary treatment for early-stage renal cell carcinoma (RCC), but alone it has limited benefit in patients with metastatic disease. The advent of targeted agents for RCC has improved the outcome in these patients, and there is increasing interest in exploring the efficacy and safety of these agents in combination with surgery in both early and advanced disease.
This article reviews approved and emerging targeted therapies for RCC and outlines the rationale and implications for combining these therapies with surgery.
A search of the literature, trial registries, and meeting proceedings was performed, and reports on surgery, receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors, vascular endothelial growth factor antibodies, mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors, and cytokine adjuvant therapy relating to RCC were critically reviewed.
Nephrectomy has been shown to improve overall survival in patients with metastatic RCC (mRCC) treated with interferon alpha. Combining targeted therapy with surgery has the potential to improve efficacy and tolerability relative to cytokine therapy and prospective studies are underway. In the localized setting, there is some evidence of tumor downsizing with neoadjuvant targeted therapy. The tolerability and safety of targeted agents used perioperatively must be considered, particularly in the adjuvant setting where chronic therapy is required to prevent recurrence or metastasis. Novel agents with greater specificity and improved safety profiles are under development and have the potential to enhance efficacy and minimize the risk of complications.
For patients with mRCC, randomized controlled trials are ongoing to define the role and sequence of nephrectomy in combination with targeted therapy. Until data are available, nephrectomy remains part of the mRCC treatment algorithm for patients with good performance status and a resectable tumor. Targeted therapy to downsize large primary tumors in nonmetastatic disease is investigational, but the rate of surgically relevant down-staging and tumor shrinkage seen with the current generation of agents is limited. In patients with high-risk nonmetastatic disease, adjuvant therapy must be administered only in the context of the ongoing clinical trials since there are no data showing efficacy in this setting.
手术干预是治疗早期肾细胞癌(RCC)的主要手段,但对于转移性疾病患者,单独使用手术的获益有限。针对 RCC 的靶向药物的出现改善了这些患者的预后,人们越来越感兴趣地探索这些药物在早期和晚期疾病中与手术联合应用的疗效和安全性。
本文综述了批准用于治疗 RCC 的靶向药物和新兴药物,并概述了将这些药物与手术联合应用的原理和意义。
对文献、试验注册处和会议记录进行了检索,并对与 RCC 相关的手术、受体酪氨酸激酶抑制剂、血管内皮生长因子抗体、哺乳动物雷帕霉素靶蛋白抑制剂和细胞因子辅助治疗的报告进行了批判性评价。
研究表明,在接受干扰素α治疗的转移性肾细胞癌(mRCC)患者中,肾切除术可改善总体生存率。与细胞因子治疗相比,联合靶向治疗与手术有提高疗效和耐受性的潜力,目前正在进行前瞻性研究。在局限性疾病中,有证据表明新辅助靶向治疗可使肿瘤缩小。必须考虑围手术期使用靶向药物的耐受性和安全性,特别是在需要进行慢性治疗以预防复发或转移的辅助治疗中。具有更高特异性和改善安全性特征的新型药物正在开发中,有可能提高疗效并降低并发症风险。
对于 mRCC 患者,正在进行随机对照试验以确定在联合靶向治疗中肾切除术的作用和顺序。在获得数据之前,对于身体状况良好且可切除肿瘤的患者,肾切除术仍然是 mRCC 治疗方案的一部分。针对非转移性疾病中大型原发肿瘤的靶向治疗是探索性的,但目前这一代药物的手术相关降期和肿瘤缩小的比例有限。对于高危非转移性疾病患者,由于在这种情况下没有疗效数据,辅助治疗只能在正在进行的临床试验背景下进行。