| Literature DB >> 25937868 |
Chantal Dreyer1, Marie-Paule Sablin1, Mohamed Bouattour1, Cindy Neuzillet1, Maxime Ronot1, Safi Dokmak1, Jacques Belghiti1, Nathalie Guedj1, Valérie Paradis1, Eric Raymond1, Sandrine Faivre1.
Abstract
Advanced cholangiocarcinoma is associated with poor prognostic survival and has limited therapeutic options available at present. The importance of angiogenesis and expression of pro-angiogenic factors in intrahepatic forms of cholangiocarcinoma suggest that therapies targeting angiogenesis might be useful for the treatment of this disease. Here we report three cases of patients with advanced intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma progressive after standard chemotherapy and treated with sunitinib 50 mg/d in 6-wk cycles of 4 wk on treatment followed by 2 wk off treatment (Schedule 4/2). In all three patients, sunitinib treatment was associated with a sustained disease control superior to 4 mo, patients achieving either a partial response or stable disease. A reduction in tumor size and density was observed in all cases, suggesting tumor necrosis as a result of sunitinib treatment in these patients. In addition, sunitinib was generally well tolerated and the occurrence of side effects was managed with standard medical interventions, as required. Our results suggest that sunitinib therapy may be associated with favorable outcomes and tolerability in patients with advanced cholangiocarcinoma. Those observations contributed to launch a prospective phase II multicenter trial investigating sunitinib in advanced intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (SUN-CK study; NCT01718327).Entities:
Keywords: Antiangiogenic therapy; Biliary tract tumors; Chemoresistance; Hypodensity; Tumor response; Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor inhibitors
Year: 2015 PMID: 25937868 PMCID: PMC4411533 DOI: 10.4254/wjh.v7.i6.910
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Hepatol