A Retrospective Study of Safety and Efficacy of Locoregional Therapies Combined With Anti-VEGF/TKIs and Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors for All Comers of Intention-to-treat Patients With Hepatocellular Carcinoma Beyond UCSF Criteria Before Liver Transplantation
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Status
- Not yet recruiting
- Sponsor
- Ningbo Medical Center Lihuili Hospital
- Enrollment
- 300
- Primary Endpoint
- Successful Down-staging Rate to UCSF Criteria
Overview
Brief Summary
This is a single-center, retrospective cohort study aiming to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a combined treatment strategy for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) who are beyond the UCSF criteria but intended for liver transplantation. The primary objective is to assess the outcomes of these "intention-to-treat" patients who received locoregional therapies (LRT, such as TACE or radiotherapy) in combination with systemic therapy (anti-VEGF/Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors and Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors) as a "conversion therapy" prior to potential transplantation. This approach is distinct from traditional bridging or down-staging therapies by incorporating more aggressive systemic regimens. The study plans to enroll 300 subjects. The exposure group will include approximately 100 patients beyond UCSF criteria who received the combined conversion therapy between January 2020 and December 2024. A control group of about 200 patients who met the UCSF criteria and were directly listed for transplantation in the same period will be used for comparison. Data will be collected from medical records and the China Liver Transplant Registry (CLTR), with follow-up until December 2025.
Primary outcome measures include:
Objective Response Rate (ORR) of conversion therapy per mRECIST. Rate of successful down-staging to meet UCSF criteria.
1-, 2-, and 3-year overall survival (OS) rates of the intention-to-treat population.
Actual liver transplantation rate after successful conversion. Post-transplant 1-, 2-, and 3-year OS and recurrence-free survival (RFS) rates.
Secondary outcomes involve:
Safety profiles of both conversion therapy and subsequent transplantation. Analysis of factors influencing conversion success and treatment efficacy. Determination of an optimal washout period for Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors prior to transplantation.
The study seeks to provide high-level evidence for optimizing pre-transplant conversion strategies for advanced HCC patients currently outside standard transplant criteria.
Study Design
- Study Type
- Observational
- Observational Model
- Case Control
- Time Perspective
- Retrospective
Eligibility Criteria
- Ages
- 16 Years to — (Child, Adult, Older Adult)
- Sex
- All
- Accepts Healthy Volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria
- •Clinical diagnosis of HCC;
- •CNLC Stage I-IIIA.
Exclusion Criteria
- •Extrahepatic metastasis;
- •Type IV portal vein tumor thrombus.
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Successful Down-staging Rate to UCSF Criteria
Time Frame: From the start of conversion therapy until the date of meeting UCSF criteria or therapy termination (assessed up to 24 months).
Proportion of patients whose tumor burden is reduced to meet the UCSF transplant criteria after conversion therapy, based on imaging and tumor marker assessment.
Objective Response Rate (ORR)
Time Frame: From the start of conversion therapy until the completion of therapy (assessed up to 24 months).
Proportion of patients achieving a Complete Response (CR) or Partial Response (PR) according to mRECIST criteria during the conversion therapy period.
1/2/3-year Overall Survival (OS) Rate
Time Frame: From the initiation of conversion therapy, assessed at 1, 2, and 3 years.
The proportion of patients who received conversion therapy and are still alive at 1, 2, and 3 years after the transplantation surgery, analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method.
Secondary Outcomes
No secondary outcomes reported
Investigators
lucaide
Chief Physician/Professor
Ningbo Medical Center Lihuili Hospital