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C-reactive Protein in Patients with Metastatic Clear Cell Renal Carcinoma: An Important Biomarker for Tumor-associated Inflammation

Authors: Albrecht Reichle, Jochen Grassinger, Klaus Bross, Jochen Wilke, Thomas Suedhoff, Bernhard Walter, Wolf-Ferdinand Wieland, Anna Berand and Reinhard Andreesen
Publication Date: 07 Feb 2007
Biomarker Insights 2006:1 87-98

Albrecht Reichle, Jochen Grassinger, Klaus Bross, Jochen Wilke, Thomas Suedhoff, Bernhard Walter, Wolf-Ferdinand Wieland, Anna Berand and Reinhard Andreesen.

Department of Hematology and Oncology, University Hospital of Regensburg. Department of Urology, University Hospital of Regensburg, Germany.

Abstract: Two consecutive multi-center phase II trials were designed to prove the hypothesis, whether therapeutic modeling of tumor-associated infl ammatory processes could result in improved tumor response. Therapy in both trials consisted of low-dose capecitabine 1g/m2 twice daily p.o. for 14 days, every 3 weeks, day 1+, and rofecoxib 25 mg daily p.o., day 1+ (from 11/04 etoricoxib 60 mg daily instead) plus pioglitazone 60 mg daily p.o., day 1+. In study II low-dose IFN-a 4.5 MU sc. three times a week, week 1+, was added until disease progression. Eighteen, and 33 patients, respectively, with clear cell renal carcinoma and progressive disease were enrolled. Objective response (48%) was exclusively observed in study II (PR 35%, CR 13%), and paralleled by a strong CRP response after 4 weeks on treatment, p = 0.0005, in all 29 pts (100%) with elevated CRP levels. Median progression-free survival could be more than doubled from a median of 4.7 months (95% CI, 1.0 to 10.4) to 11.5 months (6.8 to 16.2) in study II, p = 0.00001. Median overall survival of population II was 26 months. Efficacious negative regulation of tumor-associated infl ammation by transcription modulators may result in a steep increase of tumor response and survival.

Categories: Cancer , Oncology , Biomarkers