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The prognosis for patients with metastatic or locally advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is poor. The role of conventional systemic chemotherapy has been very limited because most chemotherapeutic agents are in-effective and relative toxic to HCC patients who tend to have poor organ function reserves due to liver cirrhosis. The molecular-targeted therapy, which aims at deranged signaling pathways of cancer cells or their microenvironment, holds promise for HCC.
Sorafenib (BAY 43-9006), a novel bi-aryl urea, is a potent inhibitor of VEGFR2 and Raf kinase. The clinical activity of sorafenib in HCC has been tested in a phase II study (Bayer study 10874), which enrolled a total of 137 advanced HCC patients. There were 4% of documented partial response, 5% of minor response, and 55% of stable disease. The 6- month progression -free for the cohort was 40%. Currently, there are two on-going large-scale randomized trials of sorafenib in advanced HCC patients worldwide.
Full description
The prognosis for patients with metastatic or locally advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is poor. The role of conventional systemic chemotherapy has been very limited because most chemotherapeutic agents are in-effective and relative toxic to HCC patients who tend to have poor organ function reserves due to liver cirrhosis. The molecular-targeted therapy, which aims at deranged signaling pathways of cancer cells or their microenvironment, holds promise for HCC.
Sorafenib (BAY 43-9006), a novel bi-aryl urea, is a potent inhibitor of VEGFR2 and Raf kinase. The clinical activity of sorafenib in HCC has been tested in a phase II study (Bayer study 10874), which enrolled a total of 137 advanced HCC patients. There were 4% of documented partial response, 5% of minor response, and 55% of stable disease. The 6- month progression -free for the cohort was 40%. Currently, there are two on-going large-scale randomized trials of sorafenib in advanced HCC patients worldwide.In this study proposal, we propose to combine sorafenib with metronomic chemotherapy in the treatment of advanced HCC patients. It has been recently demonstrated that cytotoxic chemotherapy, when given in a low-dose, continuous, and uninterrupted way (i.e. the "metronomic" chemotherapy), inhibits tumor angiogenesis. The anti-angiogenesis effect of metronomic chemotherapy can be potentiated by combining the inhibitors of VEGF/VEGFR pathway. UFUR®, a composite drug composed of tegafur and uracil, is an orally active 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) preparation. The activity of tegafur/uracil in HCC has been tested in two relatively small-scale phase II studies, with objective tumor response rates ranging from 0~18%. Interestingly, tegafur and its metabolites, including γ-hydroxybutyric acid and γ-butyrolactone, have been shown to be potent inhibitors of angiogenesis in several preclinical models. Therefore, tegafur/uracil (UFUR®), which has potential anti-HCC activity and interesting anti-angiogenesis activity, is an ideal candidate drug to improve the efficacy of sorafenib in HCC.
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Exclusion criteria
Metastatic brain/leptomeningeal tumors;
Prior or concomitant systemic anti-cancer treatment for HCC, including:
Severe and/or uncontrolled medical conditions:
Severe renal impairment which requires dialysis; proteinuria > grade 2;
BMT or stem cell rescue < 4 months; organ transplant;
HIV infection;
Major surgical procedure, open biopsy, or significant traumatic injury < 4 weeks or those who receive minor surgical procedures (e.g. core biopsy or fine needle aspiration) within 2 weeks;
Receive central venous line placement within 7 days;
Patients who anticipate receiving major surgery during the course of the study;
Use rifampin, St. John's Wort [Hypericum perforatum];
Patients taking narrow therapeutic index medications will be monitored closely. These include warfarin, phenytoin, quinidine, carbamazepine, phenobarbital, cyclosporine, and digoxin; OR
Patients for whom tegafur is contra-indicated
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50 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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