LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Prognostic Impact of Metastatic Site in Patients Receiving First-Line Sorafenib Therapy for Advanced Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Photo from wikipedia

Simple Summary Several retrospective studies tried to assess the prognostic role of different sites of metastases in patients with advanced HCC, but results are often contradictory. These studies also presented… Click to show full abstract

Simple Summary Several retrospective studies tried to assess the prognostic role of different sites of metastases in patients with advanced HCC, but results are often contradictory. These studies also presented results based on population samples with several confounding factors. Although the therapeutic scenario is moving towards immunotherapy, a better knowledge of a different metastatic site response rate to sorafenib is needed, also considering the potential future advent of combination therapies with immune checkpoint and tyrosine-kinase inhibitors. We tried to perform a large-scale multicentric study by enrolling metastatic HCC patients treated with sorafenib as front-line therapy. A low rate of concomitant locoregional treatments during sorafenib in our population study allowed us to focus on the actual response of different sites of metastases to systemic treatment with sorafenib, showing that lymph nodes and lung metastases have worse prognosis. Abstract Extrahepatic spread is a well-known negative prognostic factor in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The prognostic role of different metastatic sites and their response rate to systemic treatment is still being debated. We considered 237 metastatic HCC patients treated with sorafenib as first-line therapy in five different Italian centers from 2010 to 2020. The most common metastatic sites were lymph nodes, lungs, bone and adrenal glands. In survival analysis, the presence of dissemination to lymph nodes (OS 7.1 vs. 10.2 months; p = 0.007) and lungs (OS 5.9 vs. 10.2 months; p < 0.001) were significantly related to worse survival rates compared with all other sites. In the subgroup analysis of patients with only a single metastatic site, this prognostic effect remained statistically significant. Palliative radiation therapy on bone metastases significantly prolonged survival in this cohort of patients (OS 19.4 vs. 6.5 months; p < 0.001). Furthermore, patients with lymph node and lung metastases had worse disease control rates (39.4% and 30.5%, respectively) and shorter radiological progression-free survival (3.4 and 3.1 months, respectively). In conclusion, some sites of an extrahepatic spread of HCC have a prognostic impact on survival in patients treated with sorafenib; in particular, lymph nodes and lung metastases have worse prognosis and treatment response rate.

Keywords: therapy; sorafenib; lymph nodes; line; metastatic site

Journal Title: Cancers
Year Published: 2023

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.