Purpose: Metastasectomy is often incorporated in overall treatment in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma. While this approach was studied in the immunotherapy era, only a few cases have been described in the targeted therapy era. Thus, we evaluated the role of metastasectomy in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma who received prior targeted therapy.
Materials and methods: We retrospectively evaluated the records of patients who underwent consolidative metastasectomy after targeted therapy at 3 institutions from 2004 to 2009. All patients received at least 1 cycle of targeted therapy before surgical resection of all visible disease.
Results: We identified 22 patients. Metastasectomy sites included the retroperitoneum in 12 patients, lung in 6, adrenal gland in 2, bowel in 2, and mediastinum, bone, brain and inferior venal caval thrombus in 1 each. A total of 6 postoperative complications were observed in 4 patients within 12 weeks after surgery, which resolved with appropriate management. Postoperatively 9 patients received at least 1 targeted therapy. In 11 patients recurrence developed a median of 42 weeks after metastasectomy and another 11 experienced no recurrence at a median of 43 weeks. At a median followup of 109 weeks 21 patients were alive and 1 died of renal cell carcinoma 105 weeks after metastasectomy.
Conclusions: In a cohort of select patients with a limited tumor burden after treatment with targeted agents consolidative metastasectomy is feasible with acceptable morbidity. Significant time off targeted therapy and long-term tumor-free status are possible with this approach.
Copyright © 2011 American Urological Association Education and Research, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.