Biological therapy drugs for kidney cancer
This page is about the different biological therapy drugs used for kidney cancer. There is information about
There are several different types of biological therapy used for advanced kidney cancer. You usually have them for as long as they are controlling the cancer. You will see your doctor every 4 to 6 weeks while you are having these treatments and will have blood tests. You usually also have scans every 3 months or so to check whether the treatment is still working. The drugs used include sunitinib, sorafenib, pazopanib, bevacizumab, interferon, interleukin 2, everolimus and temsirolimus.
Sunitinib (Sutent) is the most commonly prescribed first treatment and is a tablet you take daily for 4 weeks and then have a 2 week break. The main side effects include tiredness, taste changes, diarrhoea, a rash and dry, itchy skin, and sore hands and feet.
Sorafenib (Nexavar) comes as tablets that you take every day. The main side effects are similar to sunitinib.
Pazopanib (Votrient) comes as tablets that you take every day. The main side effects include diarrhoea, a rash or itchy skin, tiredness and sickness.
Bevacizumab (Avastin) and interferon – Bevacizumab (Avastin) is a drip into your vein and interferon is an injection just under the skin. This treatment can make you very tired. Other side effects can include constipation, diarrhoea, flu like symptoms and feeling sick. Some people have high blood pressure during this treatment.
Interleukin 2 is a drug you have by drip into a vein. The possible side effects include tiredness, flu like symptoms, swelling of hands and feet, a skin rash, feeling or being sick and diarrhoea.
Everolimus (Afinitor) is a tablet you take once a day. The possible side effects include low resistance to infection, tiredness, a sore mouth, a rash or dry, itchy skin and feeling or being sick.
Temsirolimus (Torisel) is a drug you have by drip into a vein. The side effects include a rash and dry, red or itchy skin, feeling sick, diarrhoea and a sore mouth.
Your doctor or nurse will discuss the side effects of your particular drug with you and will advise you how to manage them. You can find detailed information about these drugs in the cancer drugs section.
You can view and print the quick guides for all the pages in the Treating kidney cancer section.
There are several different types of biological therapy used for advanced kidney cancer. You usually have them for as long as they are controlling the cancer. You will see your doctor every 4 to 6 weeks while you are having these treatments and will have blood tests. You usually also have scans every 3 months or so to check whether the treatment is still working. The drugs used include sunitinib, sorafenib, pazopanib, bevacizumab, interferon, everolimus and temsirolimus.
We give brief information about these drugs on this page but you can find more detailed information in the cancer drugs section. Your doctor or nurse will give you information about coping with the side effects and you can also look at our cancer drug side effects section.
Sunitinib is also called Sutent. It is the most commonly prescribed first treatment for advanced kidney cancer. It comes as a capsule, which you swallow. You take it daily for 4 weeks and then have a 2 week break.
It is a type of drug called a tyrosine kinase inhibitor or TKI for short. It blocks tyrosine kinase in cancer cells. Tyrosine kinase is a chemical messenger (an enzyme) that sends messages to tell cells to divide and grow.
The main side effects include
- Tiredness
- Taste changes
- Diarrhoea
- A skin rash or dry and itchy skin
- A sore mouth
- Sore hands and feet.
Some people have a raised blood pressure during the treatment.
We have detailed information about the side effects of sunitinib in the cancer dug section.
You have sorafenib (Nexavar) as a tablet every day. Sorafenib works in two ways. It stops signals that tell cancer cells to grow. It also stops cancer cells forming blood vessels, which they need to grow. You may have it as a first treatment for advanced kidney cancer.
The main side effects are
- Diarrhoea
- Sore hands and feet
- Dry skin and an itchy rash
- Tiredness
- Hair thinning
You take pazopanib (Votrient) as tablets every day. Your doctor may recommend it as a first treatment for advanced kidney cancer. The main side effects include
- Diarrhoea
- A rash or itchy skin
- Tiredness
- Sickness
You have bevacizumab (Avastin) as a drip into a vein (intravenously) every 2 weeks. You have interferon as an injection under the skin three times a week. You, a friend, or a relative can be taught how to give the interferon injections at home or you can have them done by your GP practice nurse, or a district nurse. You may have this treatment as a first treatment for advanced kidney cancer.
The most common side effect of interferon is flu like symptoms during the first week or two of treatment. Taking paracetamol half an hour before your injection can help to prevent or reduce these side effects. This treatment can also make you very tired.
Other side effects can include
- Constipation
- Diarrhoea
- Feeling sick
- High blood pressure
- Sadness or depression
If kidney cancer comes back and the area of cancer is very small your doctor may suggest treatment with interferon on its own. Your doctor may call this type of treatment immunotherapy because of the way it works. You have the interferon 3 times a week as an injection under the skin.
The most common side effect of interferon is flu like symptoms during the first week or two of treatment. Taking paracetamol half an hour before your injection can help to prevent or reduce these side effects. This treatment can also make you very tired. Some people also feel sad or depressed while having interferon.
Your doctor may call this type of treatment immunotherapy because of the way it works. You have interleukin 2 as a drip into your vein. You usually have it for 5 days then no treatment for 2 to 6 days. After that you have treatment again for another 5 days and then 3 weeks with no treatment. This makes up a treatment cycle. You need to stay in hospital while you are having treatment through the drip.
The main side effects include
- Fatigue (tiredness)
- Flu like symptoms, such as fever, chills, headaches, and aching muscles and joints – taking paracetamol can help
- Swollen hands and feet due to leaking of fluid from small blood vessels (vascular leak syndrome)
- A skin rash
- Feeling or being sick
- Diarrhoea
You take everolimus (Afinitor) as a tablet once a day. It blocks signals that tell cancer cells to grow and is a type of biological therapy called an mTOR inhibitor. Doctors use it as a second treatment for advanced kidney cancer for people who have had other biological therapy drugs.
The possible side effects include
- Low resistance to infection
- Tiredness
- A sore mouth
- A rash or dry, itchy skin
- Feeling or being sick
Temsirolimus (Torisel) is a type of mTOR inhibitor and you have it by drip into a vein once a week. Like everolimus doctors use it as a second treatment for advanced kidney cancer in people who have had a previous biological therapy drug.
The side effects include
- A rash and dry, red or itchy skin
- Feeling sick
- Diarrhoea
- A sore mouth
Biological therapies are being used in clinical trials and in combination with other types of cancer treatment. New treatments are being developed and researched all the time. For further information about experimental treatments and clinical trials, look at the kidney cancer research page.







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