作者
Valérie Vilgrain,Héléna Pereira,Eric Assénat,Boris Guiu,Alina Diana Ilonca,Georges‐Philippe Pageaux,Annie Sibert,Mohamed Bouattour,Rachida Lebtahi,Wassim Allaham,Hélène Barraud,Laurent Vallar,Elodie Mathias,Jean‐Pierre Bronowicki,J.P. Tasu,R. Perdrisot,Christine Silvain,René Gérolami,O. Mundler,Jean‐François Seitz,Vincent Vidal,Christophe Aubé,Frédéric Oberti,O. Couturier,I. Brenot-Rossi,Jean‐Luc Raoul,Anthony Sarran,Charlotte Costentin,Emmanuel Itti,Alain Luciani,René Adam,M. Lewin,Didier Samuel,Maxime Ronot,Aurélia Dinut,Laurent Castéra,Gilles Châtellier,Eric Assénat,Elisabeth Delhom - Christol,Boris Guiu,Alina Diana Ilonca,J. Lonjon,Georges‐Philippe Pageaux,Mohamed Abdel‐Rehim,Wassim Allaham,Mohamed Bouattour,Laurent Castéra,Arnaud Dieudonné,Rachida Lebtahi,Maxime Ronot,Annie Sibert,Valérie Vilgrain,Hélène Barraud,Christophe Bazin,Jean‐Pierre Bronowicki,Laurent Vallar,Elodie Mathias,Carine Chagneau‐Derrode,R. Perdrisot,Christine Silvain,J.P. Tasu,Patrick Borentain,René Gérolami,O. Mundler,Jean‐François Seitz,Vincent Vidal,Christophe Aubé,Antoine Bouvier,O. Couturier,Frédéric Oberti,Laurent Vallar,I. Brenot-Rossi,Jean‐Luc Raoul,Anthony Sarran,Julia Chalaye,Charlotte Costentin,Emmanuel Itti,Hicham Kobeiter,Alain Luciani,René Adam,M. Lewin,Didier Samuel,Julien Edeline,Étienne Garin,Yan Rolland,Isabelle Archambeaud,Thomas Eugène,É. Frampas,Christophe Cassinotto,M. Guyot,Jean‐Baptiste Hiriart,Bruno Lapuyade,Julien Vergniol,Philippe Bachellier,Julien Détour,Bernard Duclos,Michel Greget,François Habersetzer,Alessio Impériale,Philippe Merle,Agnès Rode,J. Morvan,Eric Nguyen‐Khac,Thierry Yzet,G. Baudin,P. Chevallier
摘要
Summary
Background
Sorafenib is the recommended treatment for patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma. We aimed to compare the efficacy and safety of sorafenib to that of selective internal radiotherapy (SIRT) with yttrium-90 (90Y) resin microspheres in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. Methods
SARAH was a multicentre, open-label, randomised, controlled, investigator-initiated, phase 3 trial done at 25 centres specialising in liver diseases in France. Patients were eligible if they were aged at least 18 years with a life expectancy greater than 3 months, had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0 or 1, Child-Pugh liver function class A or B score of 7 or lower, and locally advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer [BCLC] stage C), or new hepatocellular carcinoma not eligible for surgical resection, liver transplantation, or thermal ablation after a previously cured hepatocellular carcinoma (cured by surgery or thermoablative therapy), or hepatocellular carcinoma with two unsuccessful rounds of transarterial chemoembolisation. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) by a permutated block method with block sizes two and four to receive continuous oral sorafenib (400 mg twice daily) or SIRT with 90Y-loaded resin microspheres 2–5 weeks after randomisation. Patients were stratified according to randomising centre, ECOG performance status, previous transarterial chemoembolisation, and presence of macroscopic vascular invasion. The primary endpoint was overall survival. Analyses were done on the intention-to-treat population; safety was assessed in all patients who received at least one dose of sorafenib or underwent at least one of the SIRT work-up exams. This study has been completed and the final results are reported here. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01482442. Findings
Between Dec 5, 2011, and March 12, 2015, 467 patients were randomly assigned; after eight patients withdrew consent, 237 were assigned to SIRT and 222 to sorafenib. In the SIRT group, 53 (22%) of 237 patients did not receive SIRT; 26 (49%) of these 53 patients were treated with sorafenib. Median follow-up was 27·9 months (IQR 21·9–33·6) in the SIRT group and 28·1 months (20·0–35·3) in the sorafenib group. Median overall survival was 8·0 months (95% CI 6·7–9·9) in the SIRT group versus 9·9 months (8·7–11·4) in the sorafenib group (hazard ratio 1·15 [95% CI 0·94–1·41] for SIRT vs sorafenib; p=0·18). In the safety population, at least one serious adverse event was reported in 174 (77%) of 226 patients in the SIRT group and in 176 (82%) of 216 in the sorafenib group. The most frequent grade 3 or worse treatment-related adverse events were fatigue (20 [9%] vs 41 [19%]), liver dysfunction (25 [11%] vs 27 [13%]), increased laboratory liver values (20 [9%] vs 16 [7%]), haematological abnormalities (23 [10%] vs 30 [14%]), diarrhoea (three [1%] vs 30 [14%]), abdominal pain (six [3%] vs 14 [6%]), increased creatinine (four [2%] vs 12 [6%]), and hand-foot skin reaction (one [<1%] vs 12 [6%]). 19 deaths in the SIRT group and 12 in the sorafenib group were deemed to be treatment related. Interpretation
In patients with locally advanced or intermediate-stage hepatocellular carcinoma after unsuccessful transarterial chemoembolisation, overall survival did not significantly differ between the two groups. Quality of life and tolerance might help when choosing between the two treatments. Funding
Sirtex Medical Inc.