New treatment approaches for metastatic renal cell carcinoma.
Review
Overview
abstract
Metastatic renal cell carcinoma remains a disease that is highly resistant to systemic therapy and difficult to treat. Numerous studies with many different treatment modalities have resulted in only minor advances. No single agent or combination therapy has consistently shown a response proportion of 20% or higher. Interleukin-2 and interferon-alpha-based therapies are most commonly used to treat advanced disease, demonstrating low but reproducible response proportions in the 10% to 20% range, with durable responses of 5% or less. In the last few years, randomized studies have for the first time demonstrated a survival advantage for patients receiving systemic therapy, although this advantage is marginal. A number of novel treatment strategies are being investigated with some encouraging early results. The identification of new agents with better antitumor activity remains a high priority in the treatment of advanced renal cell carcinoma.