Lee Discusses Future Research for Metastatic RCC

Video

Chung-Han Lee, MD, PhD, spoke about necessary research needed moving forward for patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma.

In an interview with CancerNetwork® during the 2022 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium,Chung-Han Lee, MD, PhD, assistant attending physician for the Genitourinary Oncology service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, discussed where research should be focused and what the future may hold for the treatment of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC).

Lee served as investigator of an exploratory analysis of the KEYNOTE-146 study (NCT02501096) examining biomarkers of response for lenvatinib (Lenvima) plus pembrolizumab (Keytruda) in patients with metastatic RCC. Results of that analysis revealed responses across biomarker subgroups, leading investigators to continue searching for ways of determining which patients benefit most from the regimen.

Transcript:

Right now, for patients who are previously treated, there’s a huge clinical need. For us to answer [necessary research] questions, we have to design some of our biomarker studies specifically for the purpose of answering a specific clinical question. Based off these results and others, what we have seen is that using very old historic treatment naïve tissue that doesn’t seem to reflect the current clinical context well —especially in this treatment refractory or previously treated salvage type of setting—what we need to do is understand that this still represents a huge need for patients. Most people still, unfortunately, require further systemic therapy despite the fact that most of our biomarker efforts have been focused in the frontline space. The second line and previously treated space remains essentially wide open.

Recent Videos
A review of patients with metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma shows radiological tumor burden as an independent prognostic factor for survival.
A phase 2 trial is assessing ubamatamab in patients with MUC16-expressing SMARCB1-deficient renal medullary carcinoma and epithelioid sarcoma.
Analysis of 2 phase 1 trials compared gut biome diversity between standard of care with or without CBM588 in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma.
Although no responses were observed in 11 patients receiving abemaciclib monotherapy, combination therapies with abemaciclib may offer clinical benefit.
Findings show no difference in overall survival between various treatments for metastatic RCC previously managed with immunotherapy and TKIs.
An epigenomic profiling approach may help pick up the entire tumor burden, thereby assisting with detecting sarcomatoid features in those with RCC.
Rohit Gosain, MD; Sumanta Kumar Pal, MD, FASCO; and Rahul Gosain, MD, presenting slides
Related Content