PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Continuing a cancer treatment despite tumor growth may be valuable: sunitinib in renal cell carcinoma as example.

  • Mauricio Burotto,
  • Julia Wilkerson,
  • Wilfred Stein,
  • Robert Motzer,
  • Susan Bates,
  • Tito Fojo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0096316
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 5
p. e96316

Abstract

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The US FDA and the EMA have approved seven agents for the treatment of renal cell carcinoma, primarily based on differences in progression-free survival (PFS). Because PFS is an arbitrary endpoint we hypothesized that an analysis would demonstrate the growth rate of tumors remained constant at the time of RECIST-defined disease progression.We previously estimated the growth (g) and regression (d) rates and the stability of g using data from the Phase III trial comparing sunitinib and interferon.Sufficient data were available and rate constants statistically valid in 321 of 374 patients randomized to sunitinib. Median d was 0•0052 days(-1); in 53 patients no tumor growth was recorded. Median g was 0•00082 days(-1) and was stable for a median of 275 days on therapy, remaining stable beyond 300, 600 and 900 days in 122, 65 and 27 patients, respectively. A possible increase in g while receiving sunitinib could be discerned in only 18 of 321 patients. Given a median g of 0•00082 days(-1) the estimated median time to a second progression were sunitinib continued past RECIST-defined progression was 7.3 months. At 100, 200, and 300 days after starting therapy, an estimated 47%, 27%, and 13% of tumor remains sunitinib sensitive and could explain a RECIST-defined response to a new TKI.Prolonged stability of g with sunitinib suggests continued sunitinib beyond RECIST-defined progression may provide a beneficial outcome. Randomized trials in patients whose disease has "progressed" on sunitinib are needed to test this hypothesis.