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HAIC+Lenvatinib+Tislelizumab vs D-TACE+Lenvatinib+Tislelizumab for Unresectable HCC

W

Wen Li

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 2

Conditions

Unresectable Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Treatments

Drug: D-TACE
Drug: Lenvatinib
Drug: HAIC
Drug: tislelizumab

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05582278
11011 (Registry Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Drug-eluting Bead-Transarterial chemoembolization (D-TACE) is the most widely used palliative treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients. While a number of studies demonstrate poor effect of D-TACE for patients in Advanced Unresectable HCC. The investigators previous study also revealed similar results in Advanced Unresectable HCC patients treated with D-TACE. Recently, the investigators previous study demonstrated that, compared with D-TACE, hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (HAIC) may improve tumor response in Advanced Unresectable HCC. Thus, the investigators carried out this prospective nonrandomized control to demonstrate the superiority of HAIC-based combination therapy over D-TACE-based combination therapy.

Full description

HCC is one of the most common malignant tumors with the worst prognosis. At present, except for liver transplantation, surgical resection is the most effective therapy for patients with HCC. However, many patients are found to have advanced cancer as soon as they were diagnosed and lose the opportunity of radical resection and treatments are limited.More and more clinical research failures have hit the investigators' hard, until a clinical study named IMbrave150, published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2020. It has opened up a new era of combination therapy, breaking the pattern of only a single mode of advanced liver cancer for more than ten years, making the investigators realize that for the treatment of patients with advanced liver cancer, the single treatment effect is often very limited, and combination therapy is the future.The investigators recent research showed that HAIC Combined With Lenvatinib and Tislelizumab brings good results to patients with advanced HCC.To identify a more effective and safety way for treating potentially resectable HCC patients, this study is designed to compare the safety and efficacy between HAIC-based combination therapy and D-TACE-based combination therapy for those patients in Advanced Unresectable HCC.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with advanced unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma treated by D- TACE, or HAIC combined with Lenvatinib and Tislelizumab as initial treatment
  • Age between 18 and 75 years
  • Child-Pugh A or B liver function
  • Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status 0-1
  • Adequate hematologic blood counts (white blood cell count >3ⅹ109/L, absolute neutrophil count >1.5ⅹ109/L, platelet count >10ⅹ109/L, hemoglobin concentration >85 g/L
  • No extrahepatic metastasis

Exclusion criteria

  • Severe underlying cardiac, pulmonary, or renal diseases
  • History of a second primary malignant tumor
  • Incomplete medical data
  • Loss to follow-up.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

60 participants in 2 patient groups

HAIC+lenvatinib+tislelizumab
Experimental group
Description:
Hepatic Arterial Infusion Chemotherapy Combined With lenvatinib and tislelizumab
Treatment:
Drug: Lenvatinib
Drug: tislelizumab
Drug: HAIC
D-TACE+lenvatinib+tislelizumab
Experimental group
Description:
Transarterial chemoembolization with drug-eluting beads Combined With lenvatinib and tislelizumab
Treatment:
Drug: Lenvatinib
Drug: HAIC
Drug: D-TACE

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Wen Li, PhD; Lu Fang, PHD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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