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European Urology

European Urology

Volume 61, issue 4, pages e23-e40, April 2012

Kidney Cancer

Efficacy and Safety of Everolimus in Elderly Patients With Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma: An Exploratory Analysis of the Outcomes of Elderly Patients in the RECORD-1 Trial

Camillo Porta, Emiliano Calvo, Miguel A. Climent, Ulka Vaishampayan, Susanne Osanto, Alain Ravaud, Sergio Bracarda, Thomas E. Hutson, Bernard Escudier, Viktor Grünwald, Dennis Kim, Ashok Panneerselvam, Oezlem Anak and Robert J. Motzer

Accepted 28 December 2011, Published online 5 January 2012, pages 826 - 833


Abstract

Background

Elderly patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) may require special treatment considerations, particularly when comorbidities are present. An understanding of the efficacy and safety of targeted agents in elderly patients with mRCC is essential to provide individualized therapy.

Objective

To evaluate the efficacy and safety of everolimus in elderly patients (those ≥65 and ≥70 yr of age) enrolled in RECORD-1.

Design, setting, and participants

The multicenter randomized RECORD-1 phase 3 trial (Clinicaltrials.gov identifier, NCT00410124; http://www.clinicaltrials.gov) enrolled patients with mRCC who progressed during or within 6 mo of stopping sunitinib and/or sorafenib treatment (n = 416).

Intervention

Everolimus 10 mg once daily (n = 277) or placebo (n = 139) plus best supportive care. Treatment was continued until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.

Measurements

Median progression-free survival (PFS), median overall survival (OS), and time to deterioration in Karnofsky performance status (TTD-KPS) were assessed using the Kaplan-Meier method; the log-rank test was used to compare treatment arms. Other outcomes evaluated included reduction in tumor burden, overall response rate (ORR), and safety.

Results and limitations

In RECORD-1, 36.8% of patients were ≥65 yr and 17.5% were ≥70 yr of age. PFS, OS, TTD-KPS, reduction in tumor burden, and ORR were similar in the elderly and the overall RECORD-1 population. Everolimus was generally well tolerated in elderly patients, and most adverse events were grade 1 or 2 in severity. The toxicity profile of everolimus was generally similar in older patients and the overall population; however, peripheral edema, cough, rash, and diarrhea were reported more frequently in the elderly regardless of treatment. The retrospective nature of the analyses was the major limitation.

Conclusions

Everolimus is effective and tolerable in elderly patients with mRCC. When selecting targeted therapies in these patients, the specific toxicity profile of each agent and any patient comorbidities should be considered.

Take Home Message

In the RECORD-1 study, everolimus provided significant clinical benefit in elderly patients with metastatic renal carcinoma, with an acceptable safety profile. Efficacy in elderly patients was consistent with that of the overall population, and no increase in everolimus-related adverse events was observed.

Keywords: Adverse events, Kidney cancer, mTOR inhibitor, Pneumonitis.


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