One of the problems often encountered with kidney cancer is that it is a radiographic diagnosis which means treatment decisions are often made based on the findings of a solid mass on CT
One of the problems often encountered with kidney cancer is that it is a radiographic diagnosis which means treatment decisions are often made based on the findings of a solid mass on CT or MRI. Unfortunately these tests cannot distinguish the different types of kidney cancers which have variable risks. As more Americans continue to be scanned as part of their evaluation for various ailments and symptoms, the number of kidney tumors found serendipitously has increased such that now up to 70 percent of kidney cancers are discovered incidentally.
Kidney cancer is a surgical disease which means that many patients with incidentally detected masses will be offered surgery. Often, however, the tumors are shown post-surgically to have been benign or indolent, and many would not have required immediate surgical intervention. In the absence of a definitive pre-surgical diagnosis, surgeons generally must opt for surgery.
The results of a prospective multicenter phase III study being presented at the 2010 annual meeting of the American Urological Association demonstrate that the use of an antibody called 124I-girentuximab with PET/CT imaging can help to distinguish clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC), the predominant variant of kidney cancer, from other types of benign or malignant kidney masses. If approved by the FDA, this will be one of the first diagnostic scans which can distinguish not only identify a tumor's origin and location, but also provide data on the type (histology) of that tumor. Armed with this information, physicians and patients will be able to make more informed treatment choices.
Robert G. Uzzo, M.D., F.A.C.S., chairman of Fox Chase Cancer Center's department of surgery, will present the results of this Phase III study entitled Multicenter Phase III REDECT trial with 124 I-girentuximab-PET/CT for the pre-surgical Detection of Clear Cell Renal Carcinoma (cc(RCC)" at the "Late Breaking" session of the AUA in San Francisco on Tuesday, June 1.
124I-girentuximab is a monoclonal antibody that binds to a unique protein expressed highly on the most common and lethal type of kidney cancer (clear cell renal cell carcinoma). When injected intravenously as part of a PET/CT scan, it gives histological information providing useful non-invasive clinical insights to a renal masses biologic properties. The PET imaging with 124I-girentuximab (REDECTANE) is a cutting-edge type of molecular imaging tool. Researchers at Fox Chase Cancer Center have led accrual nationally to this important Phase III trial.
"The ability to distinguish pre-operatively between aggressive and less aggressive kidney masses is a critical clinical challenge," says Uzzo, who is also co-director of Fox Chase's Keystone Program in Personalized Kidney Cancer Therapy. "Such information makes a direct impact on patient management, giving physicians the ability to match tumor biology to appropriate treatment strategies."
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Researchers identified and enrolled 226 patients in the multi-center study and found that the antibody 124I-girentuximab (cG250) binds to an aggressive phenotype, which is expressed in more than 95 percent of clear cell RCC––the most common form of kidney cancer, accounting for up to 90 percent of all kidney cancer deaths.
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This multi-center Phase III REDECT trial was conducted at 14 centers across the US and sponsored by Wilex AG, Munich, Germany.
The full final data set, including diagnostic endpoints and sample patient images, will be presented at the AUA meeting.
Source-Eurekalert