Abstract

ObjectivesA small subset of patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors manifest atypical patterns of response, the so-called pseudoprogression (PP) and hyperprogression (HP). Their prevalence in urothelial (UC) and renal cancer (RCC) remains, to date, mostly uninvestigated. Therefore, we aimed to provide a summary of the current knowledge about PP and HP during immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy in UC and RCC patients.Methods and materialsA systematic medline/pubmed© literature search was performed. The atypical patterns of response to systemic immunotherapy were reviewed. Endpoints were PP and HP in UC and RCC.ResultsTumors respond differently to immunotherapy compared to systemic chemotherapy. To evaluate response to immunotherapy, new guidelines (iRECIST) have been developed. To date, no studies focused on PP in UC and RCC, and the only way to evaluate its role is to take patients who respond to treatment beyond progression as surrogate for pseudoprogressors. PP seems to occur in a non-negligible rate of UC and RCC (from 1.5 to 17% and from 5 to 15%, respectively). The concept of HP, defined as a rapid progression after treatment, just took the first steps, and therefore, data from ongoing trials are awaited to elucidate its impact in genitourinary cancers.ConclusionsPP and HP are not uncommon entities in UC and RCC patients, treated with PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors. Further investigation is warranted to define which patients are likely to experience PP and could benefit from treatment beyond progression and which ones will instead rapidly experience progression despite treatment and should, therefore, avoid systemic immunotherapy.

Highlights

  • Over the last 5 years, immunotherapy has come to the forefront of cancer therapy, promising to change the treatment paradigms of advanced tumors

  • It is known that tumors respond differently to immunotherapy compared to systemic chemotherapy and usage of traditional response evaluation criteria

  • The occurrence of PP in metastatic UC and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) has been only suggested by evaluating patients treated beyond progression who experienced sustained reduction in tumor burden or stabilization in the size of target lesions

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Summary

Introduction

Over the last 5 years, immunotherapy has come to the forefront of cancer therapy, promising to change the treatment paradigms of advanced tumors. The recent approval of multiple programmed death receptor-1 (PD-1) axis inhibitors is continuously transforming the treatment of advanced urothelial (UC) and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) [1], awakening hope where there was none. It is known that tumors respond differently to immunotherapy compared to systemic chemotherapy and usage of traditional response evaluation criteria. HP instead is defined as a rapid increase in tumor growth rate (minimum twofold) compared to the expected growth rate [4]. These atypical patterns of response have been reported for advanced UC and RCC, mainly as case reports in the context of phase II–III trials

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