The treatment landscape for metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) has seismically shifted over the last 2 decades. Twenty years ago, with only interleukin-2 as an approved therapy, the median overall survival (OS) for patients with mRCC on study was roughly 10 months. 1 Starting in 2006, however, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) inhibitors dramatically reshaped expectations, improving the survival of previously untreated study patients to a median of 26 months or more. 2 At that time, few patients survived beyond 4 years. Recently, the CheckMate-214 study of nivolumab plus ipilimumab (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02231749) once again shifted the treatment paradigm and expectations for patients with previously untreated mRCC on clinical trials. 3 In that study, a multivariable prognostic model, the International Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma Database Consortium (IMDC), was used to prospectively stratify patients who had untreated mRCC. 4 The study demonstrated improved objective response rate, progression-free survival (PFS), and OS for nivolumab plus ipilimumab compared with sunitinib in patients with intermediate-risk or poor-risk factors: roughly 80% of the overall study population. Additional phase 3 studies evaluating combinations of immunotherapy with VEGFR inhibitors have also demonstrated superiority to sunitinib in previously untreated patients with mRCC, without regard to risk stratification, complicating treatment selection for patients and clinicians. [5][6][7][8] These studies clearly demonstrate superior outcomes in the short term, but survival data are immature, leaving in doubt the long-term impact for the majority of the study population.In this issue of Cancer, Motzer and colleagues report a minimum 5 years of follow-up data from the pivotal CheckMate-214 study. 9 The median follow-up for patients in the report was 67.7 months, with 94% to 98% of patients off study treatment. Subsequent systemic therapy was administered to 55% of patients in the intention-to-treat (ITT) group receiving nivolumab plus ipilimumab and to 68% of those receiving sunitinib. The nivolumab plus ipilimumab cohort maintained statistically significant superiority over the sunitinib cohort in median OS for the intermediate-risk and poor-risk-populations (47.0 vs 26.6 months; hazard ratio [HR], 0.68) and the ITT population (55.7 vs 38.4 months; HR, 0.72), and the median OS was similar for the favorable-risk population (74.1 vs 68.4 months; HR, 0.94). These data call into question the relevance of IMDC risk stratification for treatment selection given the impressive 5-year OS seen in CheckMate-214 compared with the 5-year OS reported using IMDC data in the 2013 analysis by Heng et al across all risk groups (Fig. 1). 4 Given these results, if the ITT population was the primary end point of this study, it is likely that nivolumab plus ipilimumab would have a broader label. Although prognostically significant, risk stratification may have more impact on the timing and expected goals of treatment than wit...