Background: Patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma have a poor prognosis and no standard therapy is available. The authors performed a Phase II trial of the novel agent bryostatin-1 in this patient population.
Methods: In all, 30 patients with measurable, previously untreated metastatic renal cell carcinoma were studied. Patients had excellent physiologic reserve and preserved performance status. Bryostatin-1 (25 microg/m(2)) was given in the PET (polyethyleneglycol, ethanol, and Tween 80) formulation as a 30-minute intravenous infusion on Days 1, 8, and 15 of each 28-day cycle. In general, treatment was continued until disease progression.
Results: Two patients had significant objective responses, although methodologic problems made interpretation difficult. The median time to progression for all patients was 2.1 months; the median overall survival was 13.1 months. The treatment was generally well tolerated. Myalgia was the most common adverse event. One patient died while on study. This was a sudden death for a patient receiving a 15th cycle of therapy. Aside from this patient (for whom the correlation of study drug to death was not clear), no Grade 4 nonhematologic toxicity was encountered in more than 150 treatment courses delivered.
Conclusions: There is minimal, if any, clinically relevant single-agent activity of bryostatin-1 at this dose and schedule for patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma.
Copyright 2000 American Cancer Society.