1. Focal therapy for oligometastatic and oligoprogressive renal cell carcinoma: a narrative review.
- Author
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Anderson, August C, Ho, Joel, Hall, Evan T, Hannan, Raquibul, Liao, Jay J, Louie, Alexander V, Ma, Ting Martin, Psutka, Sarah P, Rengan, Ramesh, Siva, Shankar, Swaminath, Anand, Tachiki, Lisa, Tang, Chad, Teh, Bin Sing, Tsai, Joseph, Tykodi, Scott S, Weg, Emily, Zaorsky, Nicholas G, and Lo, Simon S
- Abstract
Metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) can present with oligometastatic disease and/or develop oligoprogression following systemic therapy. Cytoreductive and focal metastasis-directed therapy options include resection, stereotactic ablative radiation and thermal ablation. Aggressive focal therapy may allow delay in initiation of or modification to systemic therapy and improve clinical outcomes. In this narrative review we synthesize current practice guidelines and prospective data on focal therapy management options and highlight future research. Patient selection and the choice of focal treatment techniques are controversial due to limited and heterogeneous data and patients may benefit from multidisciplinary evaluation. Prospective comparative trials with clearly defined inclusion criteria and relevant end points are needed to clarify the risks and benefits of different approaches. Article highlights Evaluation Oligometastatic and oligoprogressive renal cell carcinoma (RCC) should be evaluated with contrast-enhanced body CT and brain MRI, with additional imaging based on symptoms or as needed for planning of future focal treatments. Guidelines stratify patients by International Metastatic RCC Database Consortium (IMDC) prognostic risk groups (section 4). Management While the quality of the data is mixed, there are myriad options for treating oligometastatic and oligoprogressive RCC, including active surveillance, systemic therapy, focal cytoreductive treatment of the primary and focal metastasis-directed therapy. Optimal patient selection, timing and choice of focal therapy in contemporary clinical practice remains unclear. Discussion of management options for metastasis-directed therapy including surgery, stereotactic ablative radiotherapy and thermal ablation should be discussed in a multidisciplinary setting (section 7). Follow-up after focal therapy After focal treatment of metastatic disease, current guidelines recommend CT body imaging every 1–6 months with annual history and physical for 5 years. There are no high-quality data on the benefits of systemic therapy after focal treatment of all sites of metastatic disease (section 8). Future directions Multiple ongoing trials are investigating the optimal choice, timing and combination of focal treatment techniques with immunotherapy for oligometastatic and oligoprogressive RCC (section 9). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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