| Literature DB >> 29098441 |
I Walter1, U Schulz2, M Vogelhuber2, K Wiedmann3, E Endlicher4, F Klebl1, R Andreesen2, W Herr2, L Ghibelli5, C Hackl6, R Wiest7, A Reichle8.
Abstract
Systemic therapy for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is still challenging. A biomodulatory therapy approach targeting the communicative infrastructure of HCC, including metronomic low-dose chemotherapy with capecitabine, pioglitazone and rofecoxib, has been evaluated in patients with non-curative HCC. Altogether 38 patients were evaluable in this one-arm, multicenter phase II trial. The primary endpoint, median progression-free survival was 2.7 months (95% CI: 1.6-3.79) for all evaluable patients and 8.4 months (95% CI: 0-18.13) for patients ≥ 6 weeks on protocol. Median overall survival (OS) was 6.7 months (95% CI: 4.08-9.31) and 9.4 months (95% CI: 4.82-13.97), respectively. Most common adverse events were edemas grade 3, which were commonly related to the advanced stage, with 66% of the patients suffering from liver cirrhosis. Exploratory data analyses showed significant impact of ECOG performance status grade 0 versus 1 and CLIP score 0/1 versus > 1 on OS, 9.8 months (95% CI: 4.24-15.35) versus 2.7 months (95% CI: 1.03-4.36; P = 0.002), and 9.8 months (95% CI: 3.23-16.37) versus 4.4 months (95% CI: 3.14-5.66; P = 0.009), respectively. Preceding tumor surgery had significant beneficial impact on survival, as well as maximal tumor diameter of < 5 cm. The correlation of C-reactive protein decrease with significantly improved OS underlines the close link between inflammation and tumor control. Biomodulatory therapy in advanced HCC may be a low toxic, efficacious treatment and principally demonstrates that such approaches should be followed further for treatment of advanced HCC.Entities:
Keywords: Anakoinosis; Biomodulatory therapy; COX-2 inhibitor; Hepatocellular carcinoma; Metronomic low-dose chemotherapy; Pioglitazone
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29098441 PMCID: PMC5668342 DOI: 10.1007/s12032-017-1040-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Oncol ISSN: 1357-0560 Impact factor: 3.064
Demographic and disease characteristics (n = 38)
| Disease characteristics | Number of cases |
|---|---|
| Age | |
| < 60 | 15 |
| ≥ 60 | 23 |
| Gender | |
| Male | 29 |
| Female | 9 |
| ECOG (at start of therapy) | |
| 0 | 29 |
| 1 | 8 |
| Tumor size (cm) | |
| ≤ 5 | 19 |
| > 5 | 19 |
| Cirrhosisa | |
| Yes | 25 |
| No | 13 |
| Distant metastasis | |
| Yes | 25 |
| No | 13 |
| Prior surgery | |
| Yes | 16 |
| No | 22 |
| Prior systemic therapy | |
| Yes | 9 |
| No | 29 |
| Prior local ablative therapyb | |
| Yes | 10 |
| No | 28 |
| CLIP scorec | |
| 0 | 3 |
| 1 | 20 |
| 2 | 8 |
| 3 | 3 |
| 4 | 4 |
aAll Child–Pugh A
bDifferent locally applied methods including transarterial chemoembolization (TACE), radio frequency ablation (RFA), ethanol ablation (PEI) and thermal ablation
cLog-rank test was performed between CLIP score groups 0 and 1 versus 2–4, n.s. not significant
Median overall and progression-free survival in the study subpopulations
| Number of cases | Median OS [months] (95% CI) | Median PFS [months] (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| All pts included | 38 |
|
|
| (4.08–9.31) | (1.60–3.79) | ||
| ITT | 30 |
|
|
| (4.82–13.97) | (0–18.13) | ||
| PP | 21 |
|
|
| (2.96–11.63) | (2.45–4.34) |
A statistically significant result was suggested when the observed P value was less than 5% are given in bold
ITT (intent-to-treat): all patients treated for > 6 weeks, PP (per protocol): patients without dose reduction of the anti-angiogenic therapy, OS overall survival, PFS progression-free survival, 95% CI: 95% confidence interval
Side effects of study medication
| Adverse event | Grade ≤ II | % of all ≤ II AEs | Grade ≥ III | % of all ≥ III AEs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Edema | 8 | 10.5 | 11 | 52.4 |
| Colitis | 1 | 1.3 | ||
| Diarrhea | 8 | 10.5 | 2 | 9.5 |
| Nausea/vomiting | 4 | 5.3 | ||
| Dermatitis | 1 | 1.3 | ||
| Hand-foot-syndrome | 14 | 18.4 | 4 | 19.1 |
| Mucositis/stomatitis | 3 | 3.9 | ||
| Ascites | 3 | 3.9 | 1 | 4.8 |
| Leukopenia | 4 | 5.3 | 1 | 4.8 |
| Thrombocytopenia | 2 | 2.6 | ||
| Anemia | 8 | 10.5 | 1 | 4.8 |
| Hypernatremia | 2 | 2.6 | ||
| Fever | 2 | 2.6 | ||
| Weight loss | 1 | 1.3 | ||
| Anorexia | 1 | 4.8 | ||
| Elevated transaminases (ALT/AST) | 3 | 3.9 | ||
| Renal failure | 10 | 13.2 | ||
| Itching | 1 | 1.3 | ||
| Nose bleeding (epistaxis) | 1 | 1.3 | ||
| Total number | 76 | 100 | 21 | 100 |
Numbers of adverse events (highest grade per patient, evaluable patients: n = 38)
Fig. 1Significant correlation between ECOG grade 0 (n = 30) versus 1 (n = 8) at study inclusion and overall survival (P = 0.002)
Tumor size at study inclusion correlated with the median overall survival in the three study cohorts
| Tumor size (cm) | Number of cases | Median OS [months] | (95% CI) |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All pts | ≤ 5 | 18 | 9.4 | (0.00–20.21) | 0.031 |
| > 5 | 20 | 5.0 | (2.92–7.079) | ||
| ITT | ≤ 5 | 14 | 12.2 | (9.45–14.95) | 0.005 |
| > 5 | 15 | 5.8 | (0.00–11.66) | ||
| PP | ≤ 5 | 7 | 13.4 | (9.55–17.25) | 0.022 |
| > 5 | 13 | 6.9 | (2.79–11.01) |
Significance P < 0.05
ITT (intent-to-treat): all patients treated > 6 weeks, PP (per protocol): patients with dose reduction due to adverse events are excluded, OS: overall survival, 95% CI: 95% confidence interval
Serum concentrations at study inclusion and median overall survival
| Serum values prior to therapy | Means of serum values (Std.-dev.) | Number of cases | Median OS (95% CI) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CRP < 30 mg/l | 9.87 (8.03) | 22 | 7.2 (2.5–11.8) | 0.014 |
| CRP ≥ 30 mg/l | 56.07 (29.7) | 7 | 3.6 (0.8–6.4) | |
| AFP < 400 ng/ml | 82.6 (114.7) | 19 | 11.0 (8.1–13.8) | 0.001 |
| AFP ≥ 400 ng/ml | 28417.1 (78987.6) | 17 | 3.6 (2.05–5.1) | |
| LDH < 250 U/l | 178.2 (43.5) | 23 | 11.4 (5.3–17.5) | 0.007 |
| LDH ≥ 250 U/l | 379.9 (333.6) | 12 | 5.4 (1.5–9.3) |
Significance P < 0.05
CRP C-reactive protein, AFP alpha-feto-protein, LDH lactate-dehydrogenase, OS overall survival, 95% CI 95% confidence interval