Hepatocellular Carcinoma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Transarterial Chemoembolization (TACE) With or Without Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) in Hepatocellular Carinoma
Hypothesis: Patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) have few options if they fail or are
unable to undertake surgery, transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) and/or chemotherapy.
Radiation (RT) in a range of doses has been combined with TACE in several case cohort studies
demonstrating safety and a dramatic improvement in survival. Clearly these trials are subject
to bias due to non-randomized selection, possible lack of generalizability to Canadian
patients, and heterogeneous patient populations.
Objective: Therefore, there is a high priority need to investigate the addition of RT to TACE
in a randomized fashion to determine if we can improve survival in this rapidly growing poor
prognosis patient population that have no other options.
Methodology: TACE eligible patients with HCC will be randomized to TACE alone or TACE plus
radiation (TACERT). They cannot be eligible for standard treatments such as transplant and
resection. Primary endpoint will be time-to-intrahepatic-progression. Secondary endpoints
will be response rate (Modified RECIST criteria), overall survival, local failure,
extrahepatic failure, toxicity, quality of life and economic feasibility.
DETAILED OUTLINE OF RESEARCH PROPOSAL
Current State of Knowledge Primary liver cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), is a major
health problem worldwide. It is the 5th most common cancer and the 3rd most common cause of
cancer death in the world. Eighty-five percent of cases occur in developing countries, while
in the United States and Canada, it is the fastest growing cancer.
General Treatment Overview: HCC tends to remain within the liver and, therefore, cure with
preserved liver function is possible. Surgical resection results in 5-year survival rates of
60%-70%. Liver transplantation can cure both the cancer and underlying liver disease.
Four-year survival for HCC within the Milan criteria (single HCC <5 cm or ≤3 HCC <3 cm) is
70%-85% after transplantation. Unfortunately, most patients are not resectable. Transarterial
chemoembolization (TACE) has become the mainstay of treatment for unresectable HCC. What
makes TACE relatively safe is the liver-unique vascular supply from the portal vein, whereas
HCC is supplied almost entirely by branches of the hepatic artery. In a randomized controlled
trial for unresectable HCC not suitable for a curative intent, transarterial
chemoembolisation or TACE were compared to conservative treatment. TACE induced objective
responses (complete and partial response) that were sustained for at least 6 months in 35% of
cases. Survival probabilities at 1 year and 2 years were 82% and 63% for TACE, significantly
better than 63% and 27% obtained with conservative treatment. Overall survival at 1 and 2
years was also significantly better for the chemoembolization group 57% and 31% vs. 32% and
11%. However, many patients have large tumours and response rates decline rapidly with
increasing size. TACE alone results in 2 year overall survivals of 42%, 0 and 0 for lesions
5-7cm, 8-10cm, and >10cm, respectively. Therefore, additional locally ablative treatments are
being sought. In the same report, TACE plus radiation results in 2 year overall survivals of
63%, 50% and 17% for lesions 5-7cm, 8-10cm, and >10cm, respectively.
External beam radiotherapy has long been considered to have a very limited role in the
treatment of liver tumors. This is due to the fact that the minimum dose required for local
ablation exceeded the dose that would result in liver toxicity. The technical development of
stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT), alone or in combination with TACE, renewed
interest in radiation for HCC. This work was done mainly by two groups, in Michigan and
Stockholm, who demonstrated that the delivery of high doses of radiation to limited volumes
of the liver had promising results in terms of local control and survival with acceptable
toxicity. Dr. Lock and his team are one of the first centres to initiate this type of work
and currently have one of the largest databases outside of asia. In addition, he leads one of
only two groups in Canada able to dose escalate based on radiobiological parameters thereby
providing the highest possible doses within known toxicity constraints. For SBRT, advanced
techniques are used to very accurately deliver a high total dose to the target in a small
number of daily fractions while avoiding dose delivery to surrounding healthy structures.
SBRT is offered as an ablative radical local treatment. In total, eleven primary series
reported on tumor response and survival of around 300 patients who have been treated with
stereotactic body radiation therapy as primary therapy for HCC. The reported percentage of
objective responses defined as complete and partial was ≥64% in 7 of 8 series. Median
survival between 11.7 and 32 months has been observed. Toxicity, based on multiple case
series trials, indicate that the treatment is considered safe. The most common CTC grade 3-4
toxicity was elevation of liver enzymes.
For unresectable cases, both TACE and SBRT have been used safely and with good efficacy as
separate treatments. Particularly for larger lesions that are more commonly seen in London,
the outcome remains suboptimal compared to surgery. Combined treatment case series have shown
dramatic results, but there has not been any randomized trial to compare the value of
combining the two modalities. Therefore a clinical study comparing SBRT and SBRT+TACE will be
significant as it addresses a common problem in one of the two most deadly cancers.
Combined Modality Treatment RT in a range of doses has been combined with TACE in several
case cohort studies. One example is a phase 1 dose escalation study that demonstrated that 62
Gy and 52 Gy were safe doses for HCC <10 cm and >10 cm, respectively, in conjunction with
TACE. Koo et al prospectively studied 42 patients who received TACE followed by RT. Survival
in this cohort was improved compared with a historical control group of 29 patients who
received TACE alone (median survival 11.7 vs. 4.7 months). Four studies specifically compared
cohorts of patients that received TACE alone versus TACE+SBRT. All demonstrated significant
improvement in response rates and overall survival. Clearly these trials are subject to bias
due to non-randomized selection, possible lack of generalizability to Canadian patients, and
heterogeneous patient populations. Therefore, there is an important clinical need to
investigate combined RT+TACE to improve outcomes in this rapidly growing poor prognosis
patient population that has few options.
Research Design and Methodology The objective is to demonstrate superiority of SBRT in
addition to TACE in terms of intrahepatic disease progression versus TACE alone using a
randomized Phase III design. Phase I/II data has been published with recent data providing
accurate event rates for statistical estimation of a small sample size requirement for this
endpoint.
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