| Literature DB >> 28318501 |
Robert C G Martin1, Elizabeth Bruenderman2, Allen Cohn3, Bilal Piperdi4, Rebecca Miksad5, Jean-Francois Geschwind6, Alec Goldenberg7, Arun Sanyal8, Ellen Zigmont9, Svetlana Babajanyan10, Pamela Foreman11, Parvez Mantry12, Brendan McGuire13, Pierre Gholam14.
Abstract
Treatment of unresectable recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in patients who recur after resection or orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) remains a clinical challenge. One option is sorafenib, although little is known about its safety and tolerance in this unique patient population; therefore, we analyzed patients who underwent prior surgical resection and/or OLT and were treated with sorafenib in US cohort of GIDEON registry. In US, 645 patients were enrolled; 553 for intent to treat and 563 for safety. Data were analyzed in the safety population of 479 patients no surgery and 56 for resection or OLT. Forty-one patients underwent resection prior to the initiation of sorafenib, 15 patients had previously received an OLT, and 6 patients had both resection and OLT. Initial low starting doses (400 mg/day) were observed for more patients with prior OLT (71%) than prior resection (36%), resection and OLT (50%), concomitant OLT (25%), and no surgery (36%). Most AEs occurred in the first 4 weeks of treatment. Drug-related AEs were higher in patients with prior resection (87%), prior OLT (100%), or both (100%) than in patients with concomitant OLT (63%) or no surgery (70%). However, incidence of AEs resulting in permanent discontinuation were similar in all groups (19-38%).Entities:
Keywords: Hepatocellular cancer; Liver; Recurrence; Resection; Sorafenib; Transplantation; Treatment of recurrent cancer
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28318501 DOI: 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2016.10.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Surg ISSN: 0002-9610 Impact factor: 2.565