ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Adjuvant Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) for Hepatocellular Carcinoma After Hepatectomy With Narrow Margin: a Prospective, Multi-center, Randomized Controlled, Open-labelled, Phase III Study

Zhejiang University logo

Zhejiang University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Hepatectomy
Narrow Margin
Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Adjuvant Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy

Treatments

Other: regular follow-up
Radiation: stereotactic body radiation therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05602974
2022-0908

Details and patient eligibility

About

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the sixth prevalent malignancy worldwide. Although surgical excision is considered the standard treatment for resectable HCC, a high rate of postoperative recurrence was observed after partial hepatectomy, with a marginal recurrence rate up to 30%. Narrow margin resection may be the most appropriate procedure for centrally located HCC or HCC located near liver capsule because the premise for survival is the conservation of more normal liver parenchyma. Unfortunately, narrow margin resection has been reported to contribute to poor survival outcomes. However, no adjuvant therapy after hepatectomy is generally considered to be effective in reducing post-operative recurrence.

Radiotherapy (RT) has been well used in many solid malignant tumors as an (neo)adjuvant to surgical treatment, including HCC. SBRT has shown encouraging rates of local control for HCC. Compared with standard fractionation radiation, SBRT can achieve more precise delivery of high-dose radiation beams to the lesion, obtaining a much smaller target volume. Meanwhile, it could be finished in a short period which can bring more convenience to patients. Recently, several study and randomized controlled trials revealed the survival benefit of adjuvant RT (IMRT and SBRT) in patients with HCC. A large-sample and high-quality multi-center, randomized controlled, prospective study is warranted to further confirm the efficacy of adjuvant radiotherapy in patients with narrow margin resection, considering the small sample size of above-mentioned studies.

Full description

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the sixth prevalent malignancy worldwide. Although surgical excision is considered the standard treatment for resectable HCC, a high rate of postoperative recurrence was observed after partial hepatectomy, with a marginal recurrence rate up to 30%. Narrow margin resection may be the most appropriate procedure for centrally located HCC or HCC located near liver capsule because the premise for survival is the conservation of more normal liver parenchyma. Unfortunately, narrow margin resection has been reported to contribute to poor survival outcomes. However, no adjuvant therapy after hepatectomy is generally considered to be effective in reducing post-operative recurrence.

Radiotherapy (RT) has been well used in many solid malignant tumors as an (neo)adjuvant to surgical treatment, including HCC. SBRT has shown encouraging rates of local control for HCC. Compared with standard fractionation radiation, SBRT can achieve more precise delivery of high-dose radiation beams to the lesion, obtaining a much smaller target volume. Meanwhile, it could be finished in a short period which can bring more convenience to patients. Recently, several study and randomized controlled trials revealed the survival benefit of adjuvant RT (IMRT and SBRT) in patients with HCC. A large-sample and high-quality multi-center, randomized controlled, prospective study is warranted to further confirm the efficacy of adjuvant radiotherapy in patients with narrow margin resection, considering the small sample size of above-mentioned studies.

Enrollment

140 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Aged ≥18 years;
  2. Confirmed diagnosis of HCC. The diagnosis can be established radiographically by the criteria of the American Association for the Study of the Liver (AASLD), or by histologic diagnosis from the core biopsy;
  3. Pathologically confirmed as narrow margin (the shortest distance from the edge of the tumor to the surface of liver transection <1cm) ;
  4. Child-Pugh class A and B7;
  5. ECOG (Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group) performance status 0 or 1;
  6. Willing to provide tissue from an excisional biopsy of a tumor lesion;
  7. For patients with active HBV: HBV DNA < 2000 IU/mL during screening, and have initiated anti-HBV treatment at least 7 days prior to SBRT and willingness to continue anti-HBV treatment during the study;
  8. Adequate organ and marrow function as defined below:

1)Marrow: absolute neutrophil count ≥1.5×109/L; platelets ≥50×109/L; hemoglobin ≥90g/L; 2)Liver: total bilirubin ≤3× institutional upper limit of normal (ULN); AST(aspartate aminotransferase) or ALT(alanine aminotransferase) ≤ 5× institutional ULN; albumin ≥29g/L; 3)Kidney: creatinine ≤ 1.5× institutional ULN or estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR) ≥50 mL/min/1.73 m2 (according to the Cockcroft-Gault formula); 9. Women of childbearing potential must be willing to use a highly effective method of contraception for the course of the study through 30 days after radiotherapy. Female patient of childbearing potential should have a negative serum pregnancy test before 72h of her first treatment. Sexually active males must agree to use an adequate method of contraception starting with the treatment through 4 months after radiotherapy.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Have received radiotherapy for the area to be treated in the past;
  2. Severe bleeding tendency or coagulation dysfunction within the previous 6 months;
  3. Extrahepatic metastasis;
  4. Known history of active Bacillus Tuberculosis (TB)
  5. Known additional malignancy that is progressing or requires active treatment. Exceptions include basal cell carcinoma of the skin or squamous cell carcinoma of the skin that has undergone potentially curative therapy, or in situ cervical cancer.
  6. Active infection requiring systemic therapy;
  7. Diagnosis of immunodeficiency or is receiving systemic steroid therapy or any other form of immunosuppressive therapy;
  8. Known psychiatric or substance abuse disorders ;
  9. Pregnant or breastfeeding;
  10. Known history of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV: HIV 1/2 antibodies);
  11. Received a live vaccine within 30 days before radiotherapy.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

140 participants in 2 patient groups

adjuvant stereotactic body radiation therapy
Experimental group
Description:
adjuvant stereotactic body radiation therapy after hepatectomy with narrow margin
Treatment:
Radiation: stereotactic body radiation therapy
regular follow-up
Active Comparator group
Description:
regular follow-up after hepatectomy with narrow margin
Treatment:
Other: regular follow-up

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Central trial contact

Yongjie Shui, MM; Lihong Liu, MM

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems