ANZUP's A little below the belt magazine | July 2021

Page 50

Strengthening immune therapy in kidney cancer – the goal of the KEYPAD clinical trial People with kidney cancer may meet a surgeon, have their cancer removed, and many people then are thankfully free of the cancer. If kidney cancer spreads and grows, then more treatments are needed. Treatments for advanced kidney cancer have evolved quickly in the last few years, with treatments that boost the immune system now having a key role in treatment. As immune therapies have been shown to be effective in some people, ANZUP’s research focuses on strengthening these therapies, trying to make them work for more people and for longer. In 2017 ANZUP opened a kidney cancer clinical trial called KEYPAD. This study is testing if a drug often used to treat osteoporosis, (thinning of the bones), can strengthen the outcomes of immune therapy for people with clear cell renal cell carcinoma (the commonest form of kidney cancer). Immune therapies have been shown to be effective in about a quarter of patients with clear cell renal cell carcinoma after a standard treatment (sunitinib or pazopanib) is no longer working.

The KEYPAD study is a really interesting clinical trial where we’ve worked with MSD and Amgen Australia to see whether treating people with a drug that has been used for protecting their bones will make immune therapy work better for people who have the commonest form of kidney cancer – clear cell renal cell carcinoma. Craig Gedye 50 A LITTLE BELOW THE BELT

In the KEYPAD clinical trial, people with advanced clear cell kidney cancer will be offered treatment with two medicines (in the form of antibodies, a type of protein), pembrolizumab and denosumab. The study will question if these drugs taken together can increase the ability of the body’s immune system to recognize and control kidney cancer. “What we’re learning about immune treatments is that they don’t necessarily depend on the kind of cancer; rather they depend on whether the person’s immune system is ready and waiting to attack the cancer,” says Associate Professor Gedye. “The new generation of immune therapies try to teach a new trick to the immune system, to recognise and attack the cancers in your body.” Blood and cancer samples will also be collected from the trial patients to better understand why some people benefited from this combination of treatment and why some people did not. It is hoped that there is an improvement in treatment without any change in side effects. The recruitment aim for the KEYPAD study is a total of 70 participants. Even throughout the uncertainties posed by COVID-19, recruitment has remained steady. Only 19 more patients are required to join the study to complete recruitment. To find out more about the trial go to page 51 or visit https://anzup.org.au/clinical-trial/keypad/ If you would like further information about this study and help to determine if this clinical trial will improve outcomes for kidney cancer patients, then please speak with your doctor.

KEYPAD trial eligibility Adults with unresectable or metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma with no history of significant autoimmune disease and no previous treatment with immunotherapy. If you think you are eligible for this trial please talk to your doctor.


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Articles inside

2021 Move #YourWay ambassadors

4min
pages 66-68

See your suburb #YourWay / The mini challenges

2min
page 64

Strengthening immune therapy in kidney cancer the goal of the KEYPAD clinical trial

2min
page 50

Spotlight on penile cancer

4min
pages 53-54

How does your donation make a difference?

0
page 60

Belt Research Fund

6min
pages 62-63

Community Fundraising

3min
pages 58-59

ANZUP trials – kidney

3min
pages 51-52

Hillcrest Foundation supports ANZUP’s Kidney Cancer Project / New ANZUP website

1min
page 49

I firmly believe a clinical trial saved my life

9min
pages 46-48

Spotlight on kidney cancer

5min
pages 44-45

ANZUP trials – testicular

4min
pages 42-43

Worldwide prostate cancer trial now open internationally

1min
page 25

ANZUP trials – bladder

2min
pages 37-38

ANZUP co-badged study ProPSMA wins ACTA Trial of the Year for 2021

1min
page 27

ENZAMET – NEJM, QoL Translational update

3min
page 26

This is the only cancer where survival rates are decreasing in Australia. It’s time to talk about it.

5min
pages 34-35

International Germ Cell Cancer Collaborative Group update: positive news for seminoma germ cell cancer patients

2min
page 41

A new class of effective therapy for men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer

2min
pages 23-24

CEO Update

7min
pages 7-8

Spotlight on prostate cancer

5min
pages 21-22

Friends of ANZUP

0
page 12

New ANZUP Trials coming soon

5min
pages 17-18

Consumer Advisory Panel (CAP) Update

2min
page 9

Scientists sit-up for world-first clinical trial into prostate cancer

6min
pages 19-20

Prostate Cancer Specialist Nurses improving quality of care for cancer patients

6min
pages 13-15

Message from the Chair, Professor Ian Davis

8min
pages 5-6
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