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The purpose of this observational study is to assess the role of plasma concentration monitoring of treatment drugs for patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) in terms of efficacy and side effects. It furthermore holds microbiome characterization of CPI-treated patients.
Furthermore, the investigators examines the role of anti-drug antibodies and receptor polymorphisms in CTLA-4 and PD-1 receptors in treatment failure among patients with mRCC treated with check point immunotherapy (CPI). Moreover, polymorphisms in the UGT1A1 gene will be correlated with the pazopanib treatment dose.
Full description
BACKGROUND:
Treatment of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) is ineffective among 25 % of patients. However, treatment still reduces patients' quality of life.
From clinical experience, interindividual dose requirements vary greatly among patients with mRCC treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors.
The investigators expect this to partly be explained by great variation in the plasma concentration of treatment drugs. Furthermore, treatment failure among patients with mRCC treated with check point immunotherapy has not been fully investigated.
RATIONALE:
The few studies concerning plasma concentration measurement of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in patients with mRCC have found that a certain level of drug concentration is necessary for treatment efficacy. The role of plasma concentration in side effects is yet unknown.
Anti drug antibodies against the check point inhibitor ipilimumab has been shown to reduce efficacy and lead to treatment failure among patients with malignant melanoma. Receptor polymorphism in CTLA-4 and PD-1 receptors in terms of efficacy have not yet been studied.
A therapeutic drug interval for TKI treatment will allow for quicker and more precise dosing, and early signs of treatment failure of checkpoint immunotherapy will allow for quicker change of therapy, or define a subgroup of patients who will not benefit from checkpoint immunotherapy and therefore should be offered another effective treatment instead.
HYPOTHESIS:
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
All eligible TKI-patients will have blood samples drawn at each clinical visit during a 6-months period.
The plasma concentration of TKIs will be measured with liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry at the Department of Clinical Biochemistry at Aarhus University Hospital.
All eligible CPI-patients will have blood samples drawn and fecal swap performed from start CPI-treatment and during treatment until treatment failure or full treatment (2 years).
Analysis of blood and microbiome from patients receiving checkpoint immunotherapy will be be done using in-house bead-based assays, anti-human IgG detection antibody and in-house developed flow cytometry-based assay at the Institute for Inflammation Research at Rigshospitalet.
TKI STUDY AIM:
To compare the trough plasma concentrations (Cmin) of TKIs in patients with mRCC having stable disease with those experiencing toxicity, treatment failure, and stable disease or regression, respectively to identify the optimal plasma concentration level.
CPI STUDY AIMS:
Aim 1: To compare the trough plasma concentration of CPI with toxicity and outcome in patients with mRCC to identify the optimal plasma concentration level.
Aim 2: To measure the concentration of circulating ADA against immune-checkpoint inhibitors ipilimumab and nivolumab in patients with mRCC and correlate best objective response to the concentration of ADA.
Aim 3: To compare polymorphisms in CTLA-4 and PD-1 and correlate findings with clinical outcomes in patients with mRCC treated with ipilimumab and/or nivolumab.
Aim 4: To delineate the microbiome in mRCC patients treated with immunotherapy and associating it to response and survival.
Aim 5: To use circulating tumor DNA as a marker for disease activity and treatment effect in mRCC patients.
Overall survival, progression free survival and quality of life using FKSI-19 questionnaire will be recorded for each patient.
This is an observational study among Danish patients treated for mRCC over a 7 year year period.
Perspectives of TDM in TKI patients:
Determining a therapeutic interval for TKIs could optimize treatment for mRCC patients by:
Perspectives for TDM in CPI patients:
A therapeutic interval and characterisation of treatment failure of CPI will most likely optimize treatment for patients with mRCC for the following reasons:
These results will likely extrapolate to other cancer types as CPI is increasingly being used for other cancer diagnoses.
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200 participants in 1 patient group
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Jakob N Henriksen, MD; Niels Fristrup, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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