Literature DB >> 28211921

Metronomic capecitabine versus best supportive care as second-line treatment in hepatocellular carcinoma: a retrospective study.

Andrea Casadei Gardini1, Flavia Foca2, Mario Scartozzi3, Nicola Silvestris4, Emiliano Tamburini5, Luca Faloppi3, Oronzo Brunetti4, Britt Rudnas2, Salvatore Pisconti6, Martina Valgiusti1, Giorgia Marisi7, Francesco Giuseppe Foschi8, Giorgio Ercolani9,10, Davide Tassinari5, Stefano Cascinu11, Giovanni Luca Frassineti1.   

Abstract

Preliminary studies suggest that capecitabine may be safe and effective in HCC patients. The aim of this study was to retrospectively evaluate the safety and efficacy of metronomic capecitabine as second-line treatment. This multicentric study retrospectively analyzed data of HCC patients unresponsive or intolerant to sorafenib treatment with metronomic capecitabine or best supportive care (BSC).Median progression free survival was 3.1 months in patients treated with capecitabine (95%CI: 2.7-3.5). Median overall survival was 12.0 months (95% CI: 10.7-15.8) in patients receiving capecitabine, while 9.0 months (95% CI: 6.5-13.9) in patients receiving BSC. The result of univariate unweighted Cox regression model shows a 46% reduction in death risk for patients on capecitabine (95%CI: 0.357-0.829; p  =0.005) compared to patients receiving BSC alone. After weighting for potential confounders, death risk remained essentially unaltered (45%; 95%CI: 0.354-0.883; p = 0.013). Metronomic capecitabine seems a safe second-line treatment for HCC patients in terms of management of adverse events, showing a potential anti-tumour activity which needs further evaluation in phase III studies.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28211921      PMCID: PMC5304169          DOI: 10.1038/srep42499

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Rep        ISSN: 2045-2322            Impact factor:   4.379


Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) represents the commonest primary liver cancer with increasing incidence. HCC is the 5th most widespread malignancy globally and the 3rd leading cause of cancer-related death1. Unfortunately most patients are diagnosed at an advanced stage when curative treatments are no longer an option. The introduction of Sorafenib, currently representing the standard of care for advanced HCC2 and no proven second-line therapy is yet available for HCC patients and current guidelines recommend either best supportive care (BSC) or clinical trial enrolment3. According to recent studies, only 41–56% of patients failing first-line systemic therapy are potentially eligible for second-line clinical trials on the basis of clinical and biochemical eligibility criteria45. Capecitabine is an oral prodrug of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), which is metabolised to 5-FU in a three-step enzymatic reaction, the last of which being the conversion in the liver and in the tumour by thymidine phosphorylase6. The concept of metronomic chemotherapy has been introduced in oncology in recent years7. Metronomic use of anti-cancer drugs can be considered as a type of “dose-dense” chemotherapy, although differing from traditional dose-dense administration. It is neither “dose-intense”, since it does not deliver more total drug per unit time, nor is it a cyclic maximum tolerated dose regimen with a three-week break period between cycles6. Metronomic regimens are less toxic, reporting reduced bone marrow toxicity and gastrointestinal disorders, including vomiting, nausea, mucositis and liver dysfunction. Metronomic chemotherapy was studied in different tumors89. Preliminary studies suggested that capecitabine may be safe and effective in HCC patients10111213141516. The aim of this study was to retrospectively evaluate the safety and efficacy of metronomic capecitabine as second-line treatment in patients who had progressed or were intolerant to first-line sorafenib.

Patients and Methods

In this multicentric study we retrospectively analysed data of HCC patients unresponsive or intolerant to sorafenib. Patients with advanced- or intermediate-stage HCC (either histologically proven or diagnosed according to the AASLD [American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases 2005] guidelines) unresponsive or intolerant to sorafenib, were eligible for our analysis. Sorafenib unresponsive is defined as a increase of at least 20% in the sum of the diameters of viable (enhancing) target lesions, taking as reference the smallest sum of the diameters of viable (enhancing) target lesions recorded since the treatment started or new appearance of one or more new lesions of any size. Sorafenib intolerance is defined as CTCAE Grade ≥2 drug-related adverse event which persisted in spite of comprehensive supportive therapy according to institutional standards and persisted or recurred after sorafenib treatment interruption of at least 7 days and dose reduction by one dose level (to 400 mg once daily). Patients treated with capecitabine received the therapy at the metronomic dosage of 500 mg every 12 h. The centers treated the patients with metronomic capecitabine whenever they were uneligible for protocol enrolment or the center had no second-line clinical trials ongoing. Eligibility criteria included: Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status score of ≤2; Child–Pugh liver function class A or B7; adequate hematologic function (platelet count, ≥60 × 109/L; hemoglobin ≥8.5 g/dL; and prothrombin time international normalized ratio ≤2.3 or prothrombin time ≤6 seconds above control]; alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase ≤5 times the upper limit of the normal range); and adequate renal function (serum creatinine ≤1.5 times the upper limit of the normal range). Dose reductions applied when clinically indicated. Grade 3/4 adverse events (AEs) led to dose modification (500 mg daily) or temporary interruption, until symptoms resolved to grade ≤2. Follow-up consisted of a CT/MRI scan every 8 weeks or as clinically indicated. Tumor response was evaluated by modified Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (mRECIST)17. Treatment with capecitabine was continued until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity or death. Patients treated with BSC alone included patients eligible for second-line treatment (either metronomic capecitabine or clinical trial) but not complying with it. Eligibility criteria were the same as for patients treated with capecitabine. The IRST-IRCCS-AVR Ethical Committee approved the study (approval number 1440). All patients included in the analysis were treated in accordance with the approved guidelines. Informed consent was obtained from all patients.

Statistical analysis

Frequency tables were performed for categorical variables. Continuous variables were presented using median and range. Overall survival (OS) was defined as the time from start date of Sorafenib to date of death. AE-free patients were censored on date of last follow-up. Progression-free survival (PFS) was defined as the time from start date of capecitabine to date of progression or death or last follow-up whichever occurred first. OS and PFS were reported as median values expressed in months, with 95% confidence interval (CI). Survival curves were estimated using the product-limit method of Kaplan-Meier. The role of stratification factor was analyzed with log-rank tests. Correction for multiple testing was done as appropriate, using the Benjamini and Hochberg method. Propensity score (PS) is the conditional probability of being treated given a set of observed potential confounders. In this way all the information from a group of potential confounders is summarized into a single balancing score variable, the so-called PS. PS assures that the distribution of measured baseline covariates is maintained unchanged in treated and untreated subjects. Standardized difference was used as balance measure to compare the difference in means in units of the pooled standard deviation. A weighted Cox Proportional Hazard model was performed including treatment with capecitabine as covariate where all confounding factors had been controlled by weighting. PS weights were computed as 1/PS for patients treated with capecitabine and 1/(1-PS) for patients treated with BSC. Also an unweighted Cox regression model was performed. The association between hand-foot skin reaction (HFS) and objective response (OR, defined as partial response and stable disease vs. progressive disease) was examined using the Chi-Square test. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Statistical analyses were carried out with STATA/MP 14.0 for Windows (Stata Corp LP, USA).

Results

One hundred and thirteen consecutive patients with HCC were available for the analysis. 58 patients were treated with capecitabine from May 2011 to November 2015, and 55 patients were treated with BSC alone from December 2007 to September 2015. IRST-IRCCS recruit 38 patients treated with capecitabine and 45 patients treated with BSC. Department of Medical Oncology of Cagliari recruit 6 patients treated with capecitabine and 10 patients treated with only best supportive care. Department of Medical Oncology of Rimini recruit 5 patients treated with capecitabine. Department of Medical Oncology of the National Cancer Institute “Giovanni Paolo II” recruit 6 patients treated with capecitabine, Department of Onco-Ematology of Taranto recruit 3 patients treated with capecitabine. Patient characteristics for the two groups are shown in Table 1. Among the capecitabine patients 44 (75.9%) were males and 14 (24.1%) females, with a median age of 67.5 years (range 37–82), while in the BSC group 42 patients (76.4%) were males and 13 (23.6%) females, with a median age of 73 years (range 28–87). Table 1 shows that patients with BSC alone and patients with capecitabine differed in age and AFP value. After application of PS, the standardized difference between patients on a second-line treatment and patients undergoing no further treatment was generally minor, which suggested that baseline characteristics between the two groups were equal (Table 2).
Table 1

Patient characteristics.

VariablesCapecitabine N (%)BSC N (%)
Total5855
Sex
 Male44 (75.9)42 (76.4)
 Female14 (24.1)13 (23.6)
Age, Median (range)67.5 (37–82)73 (28–87)
Aetiology
 Non-viral16 (27.6)19 (34.6)
 Viral42 (72, 4)36 (65.4)
 Viral - HBV11 (26.2)
 Viral - HCV31 (73.8)
Child-pug score
 a52 (89.7)52 (94.5)
 b6 (10.3)3 (5.5)
BCLC stage
 b7 (12.1)10 (18.2)
 c51 (87.9)45 (81.8)
Performance status (ECOG)
 040 (69.0)34 (61.9)
 116 (27.6)17 (30.9)
 22 (3.4)2 (3.6)
Portal hypertension
 No44 (75.9)35 (63.6)
 Yes14 (24.1)20 (36.4)
Meld index, Median (range)9 (6–15)8 (6–15)
missing290
AFP pre-treatment166 (2–32, 784)767 (1.1–43, 194)
missing86
LDH pre-treatment220 (98–1, 035)252.5 (132–588)
missing2615
AFP pre-treatment, Median (range)687 (1–46, 401)216 (1.4–50, 000)
missing1210
LDH pre-treatment, Median (range)230 (25–918)227 (194–419)
missing4836
Table 2

Checking balance of confounders between capecitabine and BSC group after weighting.

 Mean in capecitabineMean in BSCStandardized differences
Sex0.240.25−0.023
Age63.9565.36−0.125
Aetiology0.720.720.011
Child-pug score0.100.060.157
BCLC stage1.881.860.058
PS (ECOG)0.310.32−0.015
Portal hypertension0.240.26−0.030
Sorafenib duration0.640.490.313
Best response to Sorafenib0.470.330.274
Median follow-up was 9 months (range 1–36 months). In patients treated with capecitabine median PFS was 3.1 months (95%CI: 2.7–3.5) (Fig. 1). Median OS was 12.0 (95% CI: 10.7–15.8) for patients receiving capecitabine, and 9.0 (95% CI: 6.5–13.9) for patients treated with BSC (Fig. 2). The result from univariate unweighted Cox regression model showed 46% reduction of death risk for patients on capecitabine (95%CI: 0.357–0.829; p = 0.005), compared with patients on BSC alone. After weighting for potential confounders, death risk remained essentially unaltered (45%; 95%CI: 0.354–0.883; p = 0.013).
Figure 1

Median PFS of patients treated with capecitabine.

Figure 2

Median OS of patients treated with capecitabine and BSC only.

The best tumour response in patients treated with capecitabine was partial response in 3 patients (5.4%), stable disease in 21 patients (37.5%) and progression disease in 32 patients (57,1%), according to mRECIST criteria. No complete response was observed. Twenty-three (39.7%) patients had at least one AE. The most frequent drug-related AEs were dermatologic toxicity (20.7%) and thrombocytopenia (6.9%) (Table 3).
Table 3

Toxicity.

 Total
Any grade N (%)Grade 1/2 N (%)Grade 3/4 N (%)
Overall23 (39.7)18 (31.0)5 (8.6)
 Hypertension2 (3.4)2 (3.4)0 (0.0)
 Hand-foot skin reaction12 (20.7)10 (17.2)2 (3.4)
 Thrombocytopenia4 (6.9)4 (6.9)0 (0.0)
 Edema lower limbs2 (3.4)2 (3.4)0 (0.0)
 Asthenia1 (1.7)0 (0.0)1 (1.7)
 Anemia1 (1.7)0 (0.0)1 (1.7)
 Heart failure0 (0.0)0 (0.0)1 (1.7)
Patients treated with capecitabine reported a significant association (p = 0.011) between the presence of HFS and disease control rate (Table 4).
Table 4

Best response to capecitabine and cutaneous toxicity.

 N (%)Cutaneous toxicity (any grade)
p-value*
NoYes
PD32 (57.1)29 (65.9)3 (25.0)0.011
SD + PR24 (42.9)15 (34.1)7 (75.0)
Not Evaluable2   
OS with respect to patient baseline characteristics of both cohorts are also shown in Table 5. Among patients on capecitabine, better OS was reported by patients without viral infection (22.8 months [95%CI: 13.9–28.5]) than those with viral infection (10.9 months [95%CI 9.6–13.0]) (p = 0.0006). Among BSC patients, better OS was reported by patients with ECOG 0, meld score ≤10, LDH ≤ 220 and BCLC B. Corrections for multiple testing were made for OS in the two subgroups with unchanged results.
Table 5

OS in capecitabine and in BSC patients evaluated by log-rank test.

VariableCapecitabine treatment (N = 58)
p-value #No. patients (%)BSC (N = 55)
No. patients (%)No. eventsMedian OS (95%CI)No. eventsMedian OS (95%CI)p-value #
Age
 < = 7035 (60.3)27 (62.8)12 (8.6–15.1)0.167322 (40.0)19 (37.3)6.5 (4.2–13.9)0.1277
 >7023 (39.7)16 (37.2)15.8 (9.7–22.8) 33 (60.0)32 (62.7)10.8 (7.2–14.6) 
Aetiology
 Non viral16 (27.6)8 (18.6)22.8 (13.9–28.5)0,000619 (34.6)17 (33.3)9.0 (6.0–13.9)0.4124
 Viral42 (72.4)35 (81.4)10.9 (8.6–13.0) 36 (65.4)34 (66.7)8.2 (4.8–14.9) 
Aetiology II
 HBV11 (18.9)10 (23.3)7.5 (5.6–10.7) 
 Non viral + HCV47 (81.1)33 (76.7)15.1 (12.0–20.2)0.0001 
Child-pugh score
 a52 (89.6)39 (90.7)12.0 (10.7–15.8)52 (94.5)48 (94.1)9.0 (7.2–13.9)
 b6 (10.4)4 (9.3) 3 (5.5)3 (5.9) 
PS ECOG
 040 (69.0)30 (69.8)12.0 (10.9–15.8)0.990434 (61.8)31 (60.8)13.9 (7.2–15.6)0.0063
 1, 218 (31.0)13 (30.2)13.0 (8.2–22.8) 21 (38.2)20 (39.2)6.7 (3.9–8.2) 
Portal hypertension
 No44 (75.9)33 (76.7)13.0 (10.9–19.7)0.878535 (63.6)33 (64.7)9.0 (4.7–14.6)0.6907
 Yes14 (24.1)10 (23.3)8.5 (6.8–26.3) 20 (36.4)18 (32.3)8.2 (6.0–14.0) 
Meld index
 < = 1023 (79.3)18 (75.0)12 (8.2–20.2)0.707544 (80.0)41 (80.4)10.8 (7.2–14.6)0.0027
  > 106 (20.7)6 (25.0)8.1 (4.1-NE) 11 (20.0)10 (19.6)4.7 (1.3–10.4) 
LDH
 < = 22016 (50.0)11 (52.4)12 (8.8–20.1)0.353115 (37.5)14 (37.8)15.6 (7.2–20.9)0.0041
 > 22016 (50.0)10 (47.6)12 (8.5-NE) 25 (62.5)23 (62.2)7.2 (4.8–13.9) 
Sorafenib duration (months)
 < = 3 months29 (50.0)19 (44.2)10.9 (8.8–13.7)0.021142 (76.4)39 (76.5)7.2 (5.0–9.0)0.0566
 > 3 months29 (50.0)24 (55.8)15.8 (10.7–20.2) 13 (23.6)12 (23.5)15.8 (13.9–19.0) 
Best overall response
 PD31 (53.5)24 (55.8)9.1 (8.2–11.7)0.000139 (70.9)37 (72.5)6.7 (4.7–9.0)0.0004
 SD + PR + CR27 (46.5)19 (44.2)20.7 (13.0–25.0) 16 (29.1)14 (27.5)15.8 (13.9–20.9) 
Stage BCLC
 b7 (12.1)6 (14.0)20.2 (6.6-NE)0.894410 (18.2)10 (19.6)15.8 (3.8–23.3)0.0006
 c51 (87.9)37 (86.0)12.0 (10.7–15.8) 45 (81.8)41 (80.4)7.2 (5.2–11.8) 
Pre-treatment AFP    21 (42.9)19 (42.2)7.2 (4.7–13.9)0.2553
 < = 40030 (60.0)22 (57.9)12.0 (9.1–15.8)0.736328 (57.1)26 (57.8)9.0 (6.2–15.8) 
 > 40020 (40.0)16 (42.1)10.9 (7.5–19.7)     

Discussion

In this study we evaluated the safety and efficacy of metronomic capecitabine as second-line treatment in a cohort of HCC patients not responsive to first-line sorafenib, using a dose schedule of 500 mg twice daily. Efficacy data analysis showed that 42.9% of the capecitabine-treated patients achieved disease control, with a median PFS of 3.1 months and a median OS of 12 months. The data obtained from this study were similar to those of other studies1415: Brandi et al.16 achieved a median PFS of 3.27 months and a median OS of 9.77 months, while Granito et al. achieved a median time-to-progression of 4 months and median OS of 8 months. Compared with other studies on second-line treatments, capecitabine showed median PFS longer than tivantinib (2.7 months in the high c-Met expression subgroup), yet shorter than regorafenib (4.3 months)18. Unlike to other studies on capecitabine, we additionally analysed patients treated with BSC alone. The data showed a reduction in death risk for patients on capecitabine, suggesting the efficacy of the metronomic capecitabine treatment, especially in patients without viral infection and with HCV viral infection. This data supports the possible biological difference between patients with and without viral infection19. This finding is consistent with previous study with chemotherapy indicating that HCC correlate with infection hepatitis B have a greater aggressiveness than non-virus-related tumors20. HBV related tumors have different genetic mutations with greater chromosome instability respect other etiologies and have higher prevalence of loss of heterozygosity21. These characteristics are correlated with tumor aggressiveness and lower response to chemotherapy. It is noteworthy that survival-predictive baseline characteristics of patients treated with BSC matched those already known from the literature (Child-Pugh score, ECOG, meld score, LDH, BCLC stage)22, whereas patients treated with metronomic capecitabine presented no clinical characteristics predictive of survival other than positivity or negativity to viral infection. Another interesting fact is that metronomic capecitabine might have greater effectiveness in patients with poor prognosis at baseline than in patients with better prognosis: OS was 13.9 months for BSC patients with ECOG 0 vs. 12.0 months for metronomic capecitabine patients; in patients with poor performance status (ECOG > 1) OS was 6.7 months for BSC treatment vs.13.0 months capecitabine treatment (similar to patients with ECOG 0). Our data suggested a possible activity of capecitabine in patients with poor prognosis at baseline. Metronomic chemotherapy can also be regarded as a form of long-term ‘maintenance’ chemotherapy that can be used alone, or combined with long-term biologic targeted therapies, especially anti-angiogenic drugs such as anti-VEGFR-2 antibodies or small molecule multitargeted VEGFR-2 antagonist receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors. A case report showed that high expression of VEGFR-2 was correlated with complete response in breast cancer patients treated with metronomic capecitabine9. The durable complete response to metronomic chemotherapy highlighted the importance of assessing potential predictors of benefit of this treatment, calling for further research on VEGFR2. More recently, other potential mechanisms of action have been suggested for metronomic chemotherapy involving anti-cancer immune response and other “actors” in the tumor microenvironment. HFS is a common toxicity in patients treated with capecitabine23. In breast and colorectal cancer HFS was reported to be an independent predictor of treatment response to capecitabine2425. Our data suggested that HFS may serve as an independent clinical predictor of treatment outcome. Regorafenib in second line after sorafenib has been shown to increase survival respect to placebo26. Many promising drugs in phase II studies failed in subsequent phases trials, due to the faulty study design, especially for the stratification at the time of randomization, and other heterogeneous reasons, including lacking established prognostic factors after failure of sorafenib, no significant anti-tumour activity, and liver toxicity2728. The study has some limitations, due in particular to its retrospective nature (cases were, however, consecutively selected, thus reducing potential bias). Lack of randomization, as a technique used to balance the effect of uncontrollable factors that can impact the results of an experiment, was limited applying propensity score to baseline variables. The results from unweighted and weighted Cox regression model showed that the reduction of death risk for patients in capecitabine group, compared with patients on BSC alone, remained essentially unaltered after weighting for potential confounders showed in Table 2, so we can conclude that baseline and first line treatment characteristics, aren’t factor so strong to change risk of death of analyzed patients. In conclusion, metronomic capecitabine seems safe in the second-line treatment of HCC patients in terms of management of AE, showing potential anti-tumour activity, which requires further evaluation in phase III studies.

Additional Information

How to cite this article: Casadei Gardini, A. et al. Metronomic capecitabine versus best supportive care as second-line treatment in hepatocellular carcinoma: a retrospective study. Sci. Rep. 7, 42499; doi: 10.1038/srep42499 (2017). Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
  26 in total

Review 1.  Management of hand-foot syndrome induced by capecitabine.

Authors:  Sarah M Gressett; Brad L Stanford; Fred Hardwicke
Journal:  J Oncol Pharm Pract       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 1.809

Review 2.  Capecitabine: a review.

Authors:  Christine M Walko; Celeste Lindley
Journal:  Clin Ther       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 3.393

3.  Metronomic capecitabine as second-line treatment in hepatocellular carcinoma after sorafenib failure.

Authors:  Alessandro Granito; Sara Marinelli; Eleonora Terzi; Fabio Piscaglia; Matteo Renzulli; Laura Venerandi; Francesca Benevento; Luigi Bolondi
Journal:  Dig Liver Dis       Date:  2015-03-18       Impact factor: 4.088

Review 4.  Modified RECIST (mRECIST) assessment for hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Riccardo Lencioni; Josep M Llovet
Journal:  Semin Liver Dis       Date:  2010-02-19       Impact factor: 6.115

5.  Durable complete response of hepatocellular carcinoma after metronomic capecitabine.

Authors:  Giovanni Brandi; Francesco de Rosa; Luigi Bolondi; Valentina Agostini; Stefania Di Girolamo; Elisabetta Nobili; Guido Biasco
Journal:  Tumori       Date:  2010 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 2.098

6.  Sorafenib in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Josep M Llovet; Sergio Ricci; Vincenzo Mazzaferro; Philip Hilgard; Edward Gane; Jean-Frédéric Blanc; Andre Cosme de Oliveira; Armando Santoro; Jean-Luc Raoul; Alejandro Forner; Myron Schwartz; Camillo Porta; Stefan Zeuzem; Luigi Bolondi; Tim F Greten; Peter R Galle; Jean-François Seitz; Ivan Borbath; Dieter Häussinger; Tom Giannaris; Minghua Shan; Marius Moscovici; Dimitris Voliotis; Jordi Bruix
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2008-07-24       Impact factor: 91.245

7.  Tivantinib for second-line treatment of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma: a randomised, placebo-controlled phase 2 study.

Authors:  Armando Santoro; Lorenza Rimassa; Ivan Borbath; Bruno Daniele; Stefania Salvagni; Jean Luc Van Laethem; Hans Van Vlierberghe; Jörg Trojan; Frank T Kolligs; Alan Weiss; Steven Miles; Antonio Gasbarrini; Monica Lencioni; Luca Cicalese; Morris Sherman; Cesare Gridelli; Peter Buggisch; Guido Gerken; Roland M Schmid; Corrado Boni; Nicola Personeni; Ziad Hassoun; Giovanni Abbadessa; Brian Schwartz; Reinhard Von Roemeling; Maria E Lamar; Yinpu Chen; Camillo Porta
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2012-11-20       Impact factor: 41.316

8.  Correlation of capecitabine-induced skin toxicity with treatment efficacy in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer: results from the German AIO KRK-0104 trial.

Authors:  S Stintzing; L Fischer von Weikersthal; U Vehling-Kaiser; M Stauch; H G Hass; H Dietzfelbinger; D Oruzio; S Klein; K Zellmann; T Decker; M Schulze; W Abenhardt; G Puchtler; H Kappauf; J Mittermüller; C Haberl; C Giessen; N Moosmann; V Heinemann
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2011-07-12       Impact factor: 7.640

9.  Capecitabine-associated hand-foot-skin reaction is an independent clinical predictor of improved survival in patients with colorectal cancer.

Authors:  R-D Hofheinz; V Heinemann; L F von Weikersthal; R P Laubender; D Gencer; I Burkholder; A Hochhaus; S Stintzing
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2012-10-02       Impact factor: 7.640

Review 10.  Drug therapy for advanced-stage liver cancer.

Authors:  Markus Peck-Radosavljevic
Journal:  Liver Cancer       Date:  2014-05       Impact factor: 11.740

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Authors:  Giulia Rovesti; Giulia Orsi; Andrikou Kalliopi; Caterina Vivaldi; Giorgia Marisi; Luca Faloppi; Francesco Giuseppe Foschi; Nicola Silvestris; Irene Pecora; Giuseppe Aprile; Eleonora Molinaro; Laura Riggi; Paola Ulivi; Matteo Canale; Alessandro Cucchetti; Emiliano Tamburini; Giorgio Ercolani; Lorenzo Fornaro; Pietro Andreone; Patrizia Zavattari; Mario Scartozzi; Stefano Cascinu; Andrea Casadei-Gardini
Journal:  Gastrointest Tumors       Date:  2019-09-12

2.  Extrahepatic metastasis of hepatocellular carcinoma to the paravertebral muscle: A case report.

Authors:  Kazuhiro Takahashi; Krishna G Putchakayala; Mohamed Safwan; Dean Y Kim
Journal:  World J Hepatol       Date:  2017-08-08

3.  Sustained complete response of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma with metronomic capecitabine: a report of three cases.

Authors:  Giovanni Brandi; Michela Venturi; Stefania De Lorenzo; Francesca Garuti; Giorgio Frega; Andrea Palloni; Ingrid Garajovà; Francesca Abbati; Gioconda Saccoccio; Rita Golfieri; Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo; Maria Aurelia Barbera
Journal:  Cancer Commun (Lond)       Date:  2018-06-26

Review 4.  Dietary Melatonin Supplementation Could Be a Promising Preventing/Therapeutic Approach for a Variety of Liver Diseases.

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5.  Prognostic Role of Blood Eosinophil Count in Patients with Sorafenib-Treated Hepatocellular Carcinoma.

Authors:  Mario Scartozzi; Andrea Casadei-Gardini; Giulia Orsi; Francesco Tovoli; Vincenzo Dadduzio; Caterina Vivaldi; Oronzo Brunetti; Luca Ielasi; Fabio Conti; Giulia Rovesti; Laura Gramantieri; Mario Domenico Rizzato; Irene Pecora; Antonella Argentiero; Federica Teglia; Sara Lonardi; Francesca Salani; Alessandro Granito; Vittorina Zagonel; Giorgia Marisi; Giuseppe Cabibbo; Francesco Giuseppe Foschi; Francesca Benevento; Alessandro Cucchetti; Fabio Piscaglia; Stefano Cascinu
Journal:  Target Oncol       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 4.493

6.  Metronomic capecitabine as second-line treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma after sorafenib discontinuation.

Authors:  Franco Trevisani; Giovanni Brandi; Francesca Garuti; Maria Aurelia Barbera; Raffaella Tortora; Andrea Casadei Gardini; Alessandro Granito; Francesco Tovoli; Stefania De Lorenzo; Andrea Lorenzo Inghilesi; Francesco Giuseppe Foschi; Mauro Bernardi; Fabio Marra; Rodolfo Sacco; Giovan Giuseppe Di Costanzo
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2017-12-16       Impact factor: 4.322

7.  The role of metronomic capecitabine for treatment of recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma after liver transplantation.

Authors:  Matteo Ravaioli; Alessandro Cucchetti; Antonio Daniele Pinna; Vanessa De Pace; Flavia Neri; Maria Aurelia Barbera; Lorenzo Maroni; Giorgio Frega; Andrea Palloni; Stefania De Lorenzo; Maria Cristina Ripoli; Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo; Matteo Cescon; Massimo Del Gaudio; Giovanni Brandi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-09-12       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 8.  Systemic treatments for hepatocellular carcinoma: challenges and future perspectives.

Authors:  Francesco Tovoli; Giulia Negrini; Francesca Benevento; Chiara Faggiano; Elisabetta Goio; Alessandro Granito
Journal:  Hepat Oncol       Date:  2018-02-08

9.  CD13 Inhibition Enhances Cytotoxic Effect of Chemotherapy Agents.

Authors:  Jian Zhang; Chunyan Fang; Meihua Qu; Huina Wu; Xuejuan Wang; Hongan Zhang; Hui Ma; Zhaolin Zhang; Yongxue Huang; Lihong Shi; Shujuan Liang; Zhiqin Gao; Weiguo Song; Xuejian Wang
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2018-09-12       Impact factor: 5.810

10.  Metronomic capecitabine vs. best supportive care in Child-Pugh B hepatocellular carcinoma: a proof of concept.

Authors:  Stefania De Lorenzo; Francesco Tovoli; Maria Aurelia Barbera; Francesca Garuti; Andrea Palloni; Giorgio Frega; Ingrid Garajovà; Alessandro Rizzo; Franco Trevisani; Giovanni Brandi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-07-03       Impact factor: 4.379

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