A Phase II study of neoadjuvant axitinib for reducing the extent of venous tumour thrombus in clear cell renal cell cancer with venous invasion (NAXIVA)

Grant D. Stewart(University of Cambridge), Sarah J. Welsh(University of Cambridge), Stephan Ursprung(University of Cambridge), Ferdia A. Gallagher(University of Cambridge), James O. Jones(University of Cambridge), Jacqui Shields(King's College London), Christopher G. Smith(Alzheimer’s Research UK), Thomas J. Mitchell(University of Cambridge), Anne Y. Warren(University of Cambridge), Axel Bex(Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust), Ekaterini Boleti(Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust), Jade Carruthers(Public Health Scotland), Tim Eisen(University of Cambridge), Kate Fife(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Abdel Hamid(Broomfield Hospital), Alexander Laird(Western General Hospital), Steve Leung(Western General Hospital), Jahangeer Malik(Western General Hospital), Iosif Mendichovszky(University of Cambridge), Faiz Mumtaz(Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust), Grenville Oades(NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde), Andrew N. Priest(University of Cambridge), Antony C. P. Riddick(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Balaji Venugopal(NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde), Michelle Welsh(Public Health Scotland), Kathleen Riddle(Public Health Scotland), Lisa Hopcroft(University of Oxford), NAXIVA Trial Group(Public Health Scotland), Niki Couper(Public Health Scotland), Lisa Hopcroft(University of Oxford), Robert Hill(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Athena Matakidou(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Cara Caasi(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), James Watson(University of Cambridge), Lauren Wallis(University of Cambridge), Ruby Cross(University of Cambridge), Sarah Burge(University of Cambridge), Anne George(University of Cambridge), Tobias Klatte(University of Cambridge), Tevita Aho(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), James N. Armitage(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Sabrina Rossi(University of Cambridge), Charles Massie(University of Cambridge), Shubha Anand(University of Cambridge), Tiffany Eira Haddow(University of Cambridge), Marc Dodd(University of Cambridge), Wenhan Deng(University of Cambridge), Jose‐Ezequiel Martín(University of Cambridge), Philip Howden(University of Cambridge), Stephanie Wenlock(University of Cambridge), Evis Sala(University of Cambridge), Stefan N. Symeonides(Western General Hospital), Lynn Ho(Western General Hospital), Jennifer Baxter(Western General Hospital), Stuart W. Leslie(Western General Hospital), Duncan McLaren(Western General Hospital), John E. Brush(Western General Hospital), Marie O’Donnell(NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde), Alisa Griffin(NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde), Ruth Orr(NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde), Catriona Cowan(Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust), Thomas Powles(Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust), Anna Pejnovic(Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust), Sophia Tincey(Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust), Lee Alexander Grant(Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust), Martin Nuttall(Broomfield Hospital), Lucy Willsher(Broomfield Hospital), Christian Barnett(Broomfield Hospital), David Nicol(Royal Marsden Hospital), James Larkin(Royal Marsden Hospital), Alison Fielding(NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde), Robert J. Jones(NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde)
British Journal of Cancer
June 23, 2022
Cited by 65Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Surgery for renal cell carcinoma (RCC) with venous tumour thrombus (VTT) extension into the renal vein (RV) and/or inferior vena cava (IVC) has high peri-surgical morbidity/mortality. NAXIVA assessed the response of VTT to axitinib, a potent tyrosine kinase inhibitor. METHODS: NAXIVA was a single-arm, multi-centre, Phase 2 study. In total, 20 patients with resectable clear cell RCC and VTT received upto 8 weeks of pre-surgical axitinib. The primary endpoint was percentage of evaluable patients with VTT improvement by Mayo level on MRI. Secondary endpoints were percentage change in surgical approach and VTT length, response rate (RECISTv1.1) and surgical morbidity. RESULTS: In all, 35% (7/20) patients with VTT had a reduction in Mayo level with axitinib: 37.5% (6/16) with IVC VTT and 25% (1/4) with RV-only VTT. No patients had an increase in Mayo level. In total, 75% (15/20) of patients had a reduction in VTT length. Overall, 41.2% (7/17) of patients who underwent surgery had less invasive surgery than originally planned. Non-responders exhibited lower baseline microvessel density (CD31), higher Ki67 and exhausted or regulatory T-cell phenotype. CONCLUSIONS: NAXIVA provides the first Level II evidence that axitinib downstages VTT in a significant proportion of patients leading to reduction in the extent of surgery. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT03494816.


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