# The prognostic impact of systemic inflammation and nutritional indicators on targeted therapy for renal cell carcinoma: a systematic review and meta-analysis

**Authors:** Yushuang Xiao, Yang Dai, Xushu Zhong, Luocheng Zhang, Ruilian Xie, Qiaolin Zhou, Wenyi Liang, Xu Sun, Mengting Yang, Zhuohang Zou, Yutong Wang, He Li, Ting Niu

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2026.1777753 · 2026-02-25

## TL;DR

This study finds that certain blood markers like NLR and Hb can predict survival outcomes in kidney cancer patients undergoing targeted therapy.

## Contribution

The study provides a comprehensive meta-analysis of systemic inflammation and nutritional indicators as prognostic markers in RCC patients on targeted therapy.

## Key findings

- High NLR, NEU, and SII and low Hb levels are significantly associated with poorer overall survival in RCC patients.
- NLR is also significantly linked to poorer progression-free survival in these patients.

## Abstract

The prognosis of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) varies significantly, and early treatment failure is common. Systemic inflammation and nutritional indicators may predict the survival outcomes of patients with renal cell carcinoma (RCC) receiving targeted therapy. However, an integrated evaluation of the prognostic value of these markers is still lacking. This study aims to comprehensively assess and compare the prognostic significance of various systemic inflammation and nutritional indicators for the overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) of patients with RCC undergoing targeted therapy through systematic review and meta-analysis.

According to PRISMA guidelines, a systematic search was performed across PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, Scopus, Medline up to October 17, 2025. Retrospective cohort studies evaluating the correlation between baseline inflammatory/nutritional indicators and OS/PFS in RCC patients receiving targeted therapy were included. And biomarkers included Neutrophil-to-Lymphocyte Ratio (NLR), C-Reactive Protein (CRP), Platelet-to-Lymphocyte Ratio (PLR), Body Mass Index (BMI), Albumin (Alb), Prognostic Nutritional Index (PNI), Systemic Immune-Inflammation Index (SII), Neutrophil Count (NEU), and hemoglobin (Hb). Two researchers independently performed literature screening, data extraction, and quality assessment. Meta-analysis was performed using Stata 18.0. The pooled hazard ratio (HR) and its 95% confidence interval (CI) were calculated. And heterogeneity tests, sensitivity analyses, subgroup analyses, and publication bias assessments were conducted. This analysis has been registered in PROSPERO (CRD420251167462).

A total of 152 retrospective cohort studies involving 33,842 patients were included. The meta-analysis revealed that high baseline NLR, NEU, SII, and low Hb levels were significantly associated with poorer OS. The combined HR values were as follows: NLR for OS: HR = 1.82, 95% CI = 1.67–1.99; NEU for OS: HR = 1.88, 95% CI = 1.67–2.12; SII for OS: HR = 1.92, 95% CI = 1.72–2.15; Hb for OS: HR = 1.74, 95% CI = 1.58–1.92. Additionally, NLR (HR = 1.51, 95% CI = 1.38–1.65) was also significantly associated with poorer PFS.

NLR, NEU, SII and Hb are robust and consistent prognostic predictors for patients with RCC receiving targeted therapy. The evidence all stems from retrospective observational studies therefore selection bias and the influence of unmeasured confounding factors could not be fully controlled for.

https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/view/CRD420251167462, PROSPERO: CRD420251167462.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** renal cell carcinoma (MONDO:0005086)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** ALB (albumin) [NCBI Gene 213] {aka FDAHT, HSA, PRO0883, PRO0903, PRO1341}, CRP (C-reactive protein) [NCBI Gene 1401] {aka PTX1}
- **Diseases:** Inflammation (MESH:D007249), RCC (MESH:D002292), mRCC (MESH:C538445), Systemic (MESH:D015619)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12975561/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12975561