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About
The goal of this clinical research study is to learn if Sutent® (sunitinib malate), given before surgery, can help control renal cell carcinoma. The safety of sunitinib malate will also be studied.
Full description
The Study Drug:
Sunitinib malate is designed to block pathways that control important events such as the growth of blood vessels that are essential for the growth of cancer.
Study Treatment:
If you are found to be eligible to take part in this study, you will take sunitinib malate once a day (either with or without food) for 4 weeks in a row, followed by 2 weeks of rest with no study drug. These 6 weeks are considered 1 cycle of study treatment.
During Cycle 2, you will have surgery to remove the tumor. You will start taking sunitinib malate again after surgery (at least 14 days after surgery) on the same schedule as before.
Study Visits:
At the beginning of each new cycle (Cycles 1-6), you will have the following tests:
Every 2 Cycles, you will have a follow-up echocardiogram or MUGA scan to check your heart function, if your doctor feels it is needed.
Beginning in Cycle 7, you will be asked to return to the clinic every other cycle (about every 12 weeks), unless your doctor thinks you should return more often. This means you would return for clinic visits at the start of Cycles 8, 10, 12, and so on, and may be asked to come back at other times.
At each visit, you will have the following tests:
Length of Study:
You will continue taking sunitinib malate on this study, unless the disease gets worse, you experience intolerable side effects, and/or you need an alternative treatment during the course of the study.
Early Withdrawal:
Early withdrawal is defined as a patient not being able to complete a full cycle of sunitinib malate. If you withdraw early, you will return to clinic for the following tests:
Post Treatment Evaluation (within 1 month of the last dose):
About 30 days after your last dose of sunitinib malate, you will return to the clinic for a follow-up visit. You will have the following tests:
Long-Term Follow-Up:
Following the post-treatment visit, you will be contacted regularly to check the status of the disease. You will be contacted (by telephone or routine clinic visit) every 6-12 weeks for the first 2 years, and every 6 months after that for up to 5 years.
This is an investigational study. Sunitinib malate is commercially available and FDA approved for treatment of clear-cell renal cell carcinoma. At this time, its use in combination with surgery is for research only. Up to 50 patients will take part in this study. All will be enrolled at MD Anderson.
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50 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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