Background. The most important task in the field of renal-cell cancer (RCC) treatment results improvement is the search and validation of the markers for its early diagnostics still absent in the clinical practice. It was established that even before the onset and/or detection of RCC the level of kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1) in blood plasma did increase.Objective of the study — comparative evaluation of KIM-1 levels in blood plasma of practically healthy persons, RCC cancer, benign kidney tumor patients, patients with non-oncological renal pathologies, and analysis of its role in RCC diagnostics and prognosis.Materials and methods. 125 RCC (age 33—81 years), 14 — benign kidney neoplasms (29—84 years) patients, 90patients with chronic nephritis (28—82 years) and 68 practically healthy persons (18—71 years) were included in the study. Plasma KIM-1 content was measured using Human Serum TIM-1/KIM-1/HAVCR Quantikine® ELISA kit (R&D Systems Biotechne®, USA).Results. KIM-1 level in blood plasma of RCC and chronic nephritis patients was significantly higher than in control (medians 305, 282 and 37.8pg/ml respectively, p <0.0001). The rate of KIM-1 elevation over cut-offvalue 90pg/ml corresponding to the upper 95 % confidence interval of control in RCC patients comprised 79.2 %, in patients with nephritis — 83 %, in those with benign renal tumors — 50 %. Specificity in relation to healthy control was 96 %. KIM-1 level highly significantly increased with RCC progression, and already at stage I was 4.3-fold higher by median than in control (p <0.0001). Sensitivity of stage I—IIRCC detection at cut-off 90pg/ml comprised 75 %; stage III—IV — 94 %. The highest plasma KIM-1 levels were detected in papillary cancer patients (median 644pg/ml), that was more than 2-fold higher than in clear-cell and 32-fold higher than in chromophobic RCC. Plasma KIM-1 median level was 7-fold higher in patients with G3 4RCC than in those with G12 (p <0.0001). At the cut-off KIM-1 value of 163pg/ml, corresponding to the median at stage I, significant differences in 3.5-years overall survival both in the total group: 49 % at high, 95 % at low marker level (p <0.01), and at stage I RCC: 62 % and 100 % respectively (p <0.05) — were revealed.Conclusion. Plasma KIM-1 may become the first highly sensitive marker for the early detection of RCC, but it does not allow differentiating between oncologic and non-oncologic renal pathologies. Increased basal plasma KIM-1 is an unfavorable prognostic factor irrespective of the stage of tumor progression.
Renal cell carcinoma is highly refractory to conventional chemotherapy. The survival of tumor cell in several cases is assisted by overexpression of immune checkpoint molecules such as PD-L1 to avoid being attacked by the immune system. One of directions of contemporary immunotherapy is the blocking of checkpoint of immunity by antibodies. This part of review consideres meta-analysis of the literature describing PD-1 and its ligands as prognostic markers for choice of therapy for of renal cell carcinoma. The association between PD-L1 and prognosis seems to be more robust than for PD-1 and PD-L2. Soluble forms PD-1 and PD-L1, as markers of non-invasive diagnosis is examined. The characteristic of the drug acting on the PD-1/PD-L1 system is given. in the end the conclusion is about the most effective drugs such as ipilimumab, nivolumab, pembrolizumab and their combinations is made. We also review the current progress in clinical trials, combination of drug therapy with immunotherapy, safety, and future of check point inhibitors PD-1/PD-L1.
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