Study Reveals Survival Benefit for Patients with Inoperable Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) treated with a Unique Combination ...
June 07 2010 - 9:38AM
Business Wire
A unique combination of liver targeted radioactive microspheres
(SIR-Spheres) and a standard-of-care systemic agent (Sorafenib)
appears to confer a survival benefit for patients with inoperable
primary hepatocellular cancer (HCC) including those with disease
that has spread outside the liver, according to the results of a
prospective clinical study presented today at the 46th American
Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) conference. The multi-center
Phase II study was conducted by the Asia Pacific Hepatocellular
Carcinoma Trials Group (AHCC) headed by Professor Pierce Chow,
Senior Consultant, Singapore General Hospital and Visiting Senior
Consultant, National Cancer Center Singapore.
The Phase I/II trial was designed to evaluate tumor response and
overall survival in patients presenting with inoperable HCC in an
investigator-initiated prospective multi-center study which
previously reported the safety and tolerability of the combined
therapies1. Patients with inoperable HCC with or without
extra-hepatic spread and/or major vascular involvement were
eligible to receive treatment. Patients received SIR-Spheres
radioactive microspheres (Sirtex Medical Limited, Lane Cove,
Australia) targeted to the liver followed by sorafenib therapy
(Bayer-Schering Pharmaceuticals, Leverkusen, Germany) 11–14 days
later. The patients were followed monthly with clinic visits and an
assessment of tumor was conducted by CT scan every three
months.
The results of the 35-patient study conducted in four countries
in the Asia-Pacific region (Singapore, South Korea, Myanmar and
Malaysia) revealed a median overall survival of 11.75 months.
Overall survival for patients with major vascular invasion (MVI)
and/or extra-hepatic spread (EHS) vs. those without MVI/EHS was
8.75 months and 18.25 months, respectively. This compared very
favorably with an overall survival of 5.6 months and 14.3 months
respectively in patients on sorafenib alone in a landmark
Asia-Pacific study2. The overall tumor response rate was 35.5%,
with 12% complete response (CR), 23.5% partial response (PR), 44%
stable disease (SD) and 21% progressive disease (PD) with an
overall disease control rate of 79.5%. Three patients (9%) who
initially presented with unresectable disease had a sufficient
reduction in tumor size to permit potentially curative therapy,
including 1 who had liver transplantation and 2 who received
radio-frequency ablation.
"The results of this study demonstrate that the combination of
radioactive microspheres and a systemic agent is a promising
therapy for patients with primary liver cancer, including those in
whom the cancer has spread outside the liver," said Professor Chow.
"It is particularly noteworthy that the response of tumors and
median overall survival of 11.75 months in these difficult to treat
patients are very favorable when compared to the therapeutic effect
of either agent alone. Patients in the advanced stages of disease,
particularly those with major vascular invasion in the liver and
spread of disease outside the liver are not candidates for
potentially curative therapies such as surgical resection,
transplantation or radio-frequency ablation3. Thus these patients
present with a very poor prognosis with the expectation of limited
survival. The combination of SIR-Spheres and sorafenib confers a
clear survival benefit in this patient population who has limited
treatment options available. Based on the results of this study, we
are very optimistic that the survival benefit observed for this
unique combination of the two agents will be confirmed by Phase III
studies."
Each year, approximately 1 million individuals are diagnosed
with HCC worldwide. Approximately 85% of these are not eligible for
potentially curative therapies such as resection, liver
transplantation or radio-frequency ablation due to the advanced
stage of their disease4.
About National Cancer Centre Singapore (NCCS)
The National Cancer Centre Singapore (NCCS) is the premier
cancer research and treatment facility in Singapore and in the
region. It was established in 1999 and sees about 68% of the public
sector medical oncology cases and about 65% of radiation oncology
cases. NCCS not only houses the most number of oncologists in
Singapore but is also equipped with the largest number of equipment
to provide the latest radiation oncology care in Singapore. For
more information, visit NCCS website at www.nccs.com.sg.
Acknowledgement: This study was supported by grant
NMRC/1161/2008 from the National Medical Research Council Singapore
and by Sirtex Medical and Bayer-Schering Pharmaceuticals
References and Notes:
- Chow PKH, Poon DYH, Choo SP et
al. Phase I study of SIR-sphere plus Sorafenib as first line
treatment in patients with non-resectable Hepatocellular Carcinoma.
The Asia-Pacific Hepatocellular Carcinoma Trials Group protocol 05
(AHCC05). in 2009 American Society of Clinical Oncology Annual
Meeting 2009; Orlando.
- Kang YK, Guan ZZ, Chen ZD et al.
Sorafenib is effective in patients from the Asia-Pacific with
Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Subgroup analysis of effect or
macroscopic vascular invasion, extra-hepatic spread and ECOG
performance status on Outcome. in 59th Annual Meeting of the
American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases 2008. San
Francisco.
- Hung H. Treatment modalities for
hepatocellular carcinoma. Current Cancer Drug Targets 2005;
5 (2): 131-8.
- El-Serag HB and Rudolph KL.
Hepatocellular carcinoma: epidemiology and molecular
carcinogenesis. Gastroenterology 2007; 132 (7):
2557-76.