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Neoadjuvant axitinib facilitated partial nephrectomy in patients with clear cell renal cell carcinoma and complex masses with an imperative indication for nephron-sparing surgery but no viable pathway to receive the procedure.
Neoadjuvant axitinib (Inlyta) facilitated partial nephrectomy in patients with clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and complex masses with an imperative indication for nephron-sparing surgery but no viable pathway to receive the procedure, according to interim results from the phase 2 PADRES trial presented at the 2022 AUA annual meeting.1
Explaining the background of the study, lead author Kevin Hakimi, a medical student at the UC San Diego School of Medicine, said, “Up to 25% of patients presenting with renal masses have renal insufficiency or other imperative indications for nephron-conserving management. Further, although partial nephrectomy is increasingly pursued in patients with large or complex masses, a subgroup of patients with imperative indication may not initially have masses that are amenable for partial nephrectomy.”
Accordingly, Hakimiet al launched the single-arm PADRES trial (NCT03438708) to determine whether neoadjuvant therapy with the TKI axitinib could cytoreduce renal tumors and enable patients with an imperative indication to receive a partial nephrectomy.
There were 26 patients enrolled in the study, with a median age of 69.5 years. Patients had biopsy-confirmed clear cell RCC strongly indicated for partial nephrectomy with the potential for dialysis dependence if given radical nephrectomy. All patients had complex renal masses, which the study defined as a RENAL Nephrometry score in the high range of 10 to 12 and a tumor stage of cT1b to cT3M0.
There were 14 males and 12 females. The ECOG performance status was 0 for nine patients, 1 for fifteen patients, and 2 for two patients.
Patients received oral axitinib at 5 mg twice daily for 8 weeks prior to nephrectomy. The primary end point of the trial was reduction in longest tumor diameter as determined by imaging criteria. Secondary outcome measures included tumor response per RESIST criteria, feasibility of partial nephrectomy, change in RENAL Nephrometry score, survival outcomes, and post-surgical complications.
At a median follow-up of 12 months, the median reduction in tumor size was 19% (P <.001), with a median size of 7.7 cm prior to axitinib treatment and 6.3 cm after. Axitinib also led to a significant reduction in median RENAL Nephrometry score from 11 to 10 (P <.001). There were 9 patients (34.6%) who had a partial response per RECIST criteria and the remaining 17 patients had stable disease.
The specific tumor staging pre- vs post-axitinib was as follows: T1a, 0 vs 5 patients, respectively; T1b, 4 vs 3 patients; T2a, 2 vs 0 patients; T3a, 17 patients each; T3b, 3 vs 1 patient.
“Twenty patients initially presented with T3a/T3b disease and 9 patients were downstaged,” said Hakimi.
Regarding the safety of pre-operative axitinib, Hakimi said that 5 patients experienced grade 3 adverse events related to the treatment, consisting of hypertension (n = 3), fatigue (n = 1), and weigh loss (n = 1).
Surgical outcomes showed that 25 patients were able to complete nephrectomy, comprising 19 partial nephrectomies and 6 radical nephrectomies. Twenty four (92.3%) of the patients had negative margins. There were 6 patients who had grade 3/4 post-operative complications.
Hakimi also noted that, importantly, “Patients who underwent partial nephrectomy had preserved renal function.”
Regarding next steps, he said the PADRES trial “continues to accrue with an end goal of 50 patients.”