Abstract

530 Background: The primary objective of this study was to determine whether severe systemic inflammation (SSI) could serve as a biomarker for terminal disease progression and early death in patients with intermediate and favorable risk metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC). Methods: Retrospective chart reviews of patients treated with targeted therapy for mRCC were conducted at the Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University (WCIEU) and the Atlanta Veterans Administration Medical Center (AVAMC) after obtaining institutional authorizations. The modified Glasgow Prognostic Score (mGPS) was used to quantify intensity of systemic inflammation (ISI) at baseline and at least two additional time points that were at least 10 days apart. Early death was defined as death within two years of Day 0, the first day ISI was quantified. Descriptive statistics were employed along with Kaplan-Meier survival analysis. Results: ISI was quantified 2,428 times in 135 patients at the WCIEU with a median of 16 per patient and a range of 3 to 51 versus 758 times in 46 patients at the AVAMC with a median of 12 per patient and a range of 3 to 48. Baseline risk stratification was as follows: favorable (mGPS=0), intermediate (mGPS=1) and poor (mGPS=2) with 96 (51%), 36 (19%), and 53 patients (29%) in the respective risk groups of the combined cohort (n=181). Sixty eight of the 90 patients who died in the time frame of the study did so within 2 years of Day 0. Of these early deaths, only 34 (50%) were among patients with poor risk at baseline versus 18 (26%) and 16 (24%) of the intermediate and favorable risk patients, respectively. Furthermore, 90% of these early deaths were associated with SSI as a terminal event as were 87% of all deaths in spite of the fact that 64% of poor risk patients had died as of Year 2 versus only 27% of patients in the combined group of intermediate and favorable baseline risk. Conclusions: Severe acquired systemic inflammation is a promising biomarker for terminal disease progression and early death in patients with intermediate and favorable risk mRCC. Prospective confirmatory studies are required.

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