A Trial of Hepatic Arterial Infusion Combined With Apatinib and Camrelizumab for C-staged Hepatocellular Carcinoma in BCLC Classification
NCT ID: NCT04191889
Last Updated: 2023-09-13
Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
PHASE2
47 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-04-13
2025-12-31
Brief Summary
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The primary outcome measure is to evaluate the objective response rate (ORR) of Triplet-combined Therapy for C-staged Hepatocellular Carcinoma in BCLC classification.
The secondary Outcome measures include the duration of response (DOR), disease control rate (DCR), progression-free survival rate (PFSR) \[ Time Frame: 6- and 12-month\], overall survival rate (OSR) \[ Time Frame: 6- and 12-month\], the median progression-free survival time (mPFS) and median overall survival time (mOS) of Triplet-combined Therapy for C-staged Hepatocellular Carcinoma in BCLC classification.
Moreover, this study aims to assess the safety and tolerability of Triplet-combined Therapy for C-staged Hepatocellular Carcinoma in BCLC classification.
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Detailed Description
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Hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (HAIC) of mFOLFOX7, anti-angiogenic targeting drugs, and antibody immunotherapy against programmed death molecule-1 (PD-1) immunological checkpoints are effective treatment options for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma. Many clinical studies have shown that the two-two combination of the above three treatment options can improve the anti-tumor overall response rate, the survival rate and even achieve clinical complete remission of patients with advanced HCC.
Shi Ming et al reported HAIC combined with systemic targeted therapy has a better survival outcome compared to systemic targeted therapy mono-therapy \[OS 13.37 vs 7.13 months, PFS 7.03 vs 2.6 months\] in JAMA Oncology. Although the toxicity of combination therapy is slightly higher than that of sorafenib monotherapy, these adverse effects are tolerable.
In addition, in a phase Ib study of Camrelizumab combined with apatinib in the treatment of advanced liver cancer, gastric cancer or gastroesophageal junction cancer showed that in 16 patients with HCC, the ORR was 50.0% and the DCR was 93.8%. When the dose of apatinib was 250 mg, the median PFS was 7.2 months. Camrelizumab combined with low dose apatinib can effectively reduce the incidence of adverse reactions, ≥10% of patients have treatment-related adverse reactions (all levels), no treatment-related adverse reactions leading to death. Therefore, low-dose anti-angiogenic drugs can inhibit tumor angiogenesis on the one hand, reduce immunosuppression by inducing normalization of blood vessels, enhance effector immune cell infiltration, and enhance anti-tumor immunity.
In summary, for patients of C-staged Hepatocellular Carcinoma, HAIC, anti-angiogenic targeted therapy, and anti-PD-1 immunotherapy have their important status, and the combination of any two treatments brings about synergy effect. Then, could the combination of the three treatment methods further improve the outcome of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma? This study was designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a combination of hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy, targeted drugs (Apatinib), and anti-PD-1 immunotherapy (Camrelizumab) to provide a more effective and toxic-tolerable treatment for patients in C-staged Hepatocellular Carcinoma in BCLC classification.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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TRIPLET
Hepatic Arterial Infusion combined with Apatinib and Camrelizumab
Hepatic Arterial Infusion combined with Apatinib and Camrelizumab
Drug: FOLFOX Protocol (Oxaliplatin, fluorouracil, and leucovorin); Camrelizumab for injection and Apatinib-Mesylate Tablets
Procedure:
1. On the first day of treatment, HAIC was conducted through a catheter intubated into the tumor feeding artery under DSA guidance with the following chemotherapeutic drugs (mFOLFOX7, oxaliplatin 85 mg/m2 2 hours, folinic acid 400 mg/m2, 5-FU 2500 mg/m2 46 hours) pumped into the tumor artery. The HAIC is repeated every 3 weeks. The cumulative maximum sessions of HAIC is up to 6 times.
2. Taking Apatinib-Mesylate Tablets (250 mg/tablet) orally on day 8 in the first HAIC cycle, once a day, for continuous medication.
3. The first dose of Camrelizumab was administered on day 4 of the second HAIC cycle, at a dose of 200 mg intravenously, every three weeks.
4. The cumulative maximum drug use period is up to 2 years. The patient is concurrent on medication until the treatment discontinuation criteria specified in the protocol appear.
Interventions
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Hepatic Arterial Infusion combined with Apatinib and Camrelizumab
Drug: FOLFOX Protocol (Oxaliplatin, fluorouracil, and leucovorin); Camrelizumab for injection and Apatinib-Mesylate Tablets
Procedure:
1. On the first day of treatment, HAIC was conducted through a catheter intubated into the tumor feeding artery under DSA guidance with the following chemotherapeutic drugs (mFOLFOX7, oxaliplatin 85 mg/m2 2 hours, folinic acid 400 mg/m2, 5-FU 2500 mg/m2 46 hours) pumped into the tumor artery. The HAIC is repeated every 3 weeks. The cumulative maximum sessions of HAIC is up to 6 times.
2. Taking Apatinib-Mesylate Tablets (250 mg/tablet) orally on day 8 in the first HAIC cycle, once a day, for continuous medication.
3. The first dose of Camrelizumab was administered on day 4 of the second HAIC cycle, at a dose of 200 mg intravenously, every three weeks.
4. The cumulative maximum drug use period is up to 2 years. The patient is concurrent on medication until the treatment discontinuation criteria specified in the protocol appear.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Age ≥ 18 years old, ≤ 70 years old, both men and women;
3. Clinical or pathologically confirmed BCLC C-stage hepatocellular carcinoma, no further first-line treatment;
4. At least one intrahepatic evaluable tumor existed, intrahepatic tumor is the primary tumor burden;
5. Child-Pugh score small or equal to 7 points (Child-Pugh A-B);
6. The liver tumor burden does not exceed 50% of the total liver volume;
7. Patient can swallow tablet normally;
8. ECOG score: 0 to 1 (according to the ECOG score classification);
9. The expected survival is longer than 12 weeks;
10. The laboratory parameters meets the following requirements (no blood components and cell growth factors are allowed within 14 days before the first dose):
* Absolute neutrophil count ≥ 3.0 × 109 / L;
* Platelets ≥ 80 × 109 / L;
* Hemoglobin ≥ 90 g / L;
* serum albumin ≥ 28 g / L;
* Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) ≤ 1 × ULN (if abnormalities should be considered at the same time FT3, FT4 levels, patients with FT3 and FT4 levels in normal range can also be enrolled);
* bilirubin ≤ 1.5 × ULN (within 7 days prior to the first dose);
* ALT ≤ 3 x ULN and AST ≤ 3 x ULN (within 7 days prior to the first dose);
* AKP ≤ 2.5 × ULN; serum creatinine ≤ 1.5 × ULN;
11. For female that non-surgical sterilization or in childbearing age need to use a medically approved contraceptive (such as an intrauterine device, contraceptive or condom) during the study period and within 3 months after the end of the study treatment period; For female that non-surgical sterilization or in childbearing age must have a negative serum or urine HCG test within 72 hours prior to study enrollment; and must be non-lactating; for male patients whose partner in a childbearing age, effective methods of contraception should be given during the trial and at the end of Camrelizumab injection.
Exclusion Criteria
2. The patient is using immunosuppressive agents or systemic hormonal therapy for immunosuppression purposes (dose \> 10 mg/day of prednisone or other therapeutic hormones) and continues to be used within 2 weeks prior to enrollment;
3. Severe allergic reactions to other monoclonal antibodies;
4. Known for a history of central nervous system metastasis or hepatic encephalopathy;
5. Having a history of organ transplantation;
6. Patients with clinically symptomatic ascites who require puncture, drainage, or ascites drainage within 3 months, except for those who have a small amount of ascites but no clinical symptoms;
7. Suffering from hypertension, and cannot be well controlled by antihypertensive drugs (systolic blood pressure ≥ 140mmHg or diastolic blood pressure ≥90 mmHg);
8. Suffering heart diseases with clinical symptoms or those not well controlled, such as: (1) heart failure in NYHA class 2 or higher; (2) unstable angina; (3) myocardial infarction occurred within 1 year; (4) clinically symptomatic supraventricular or ventricular arrhythmia requiring treatment or intervention; (5) Tc \> 450ms (male); QTc \> 470ms (female);
9. Coagulation dysfunction (INR\>2.0, PT\>16s), bleeding tendency or receiving thrombolysis or anticoagulant therapy, allowing prophylactic use of low-dose aspirin or low molecular heparin;
10. There are significant clinically significant bleeding symptoms or clear bleeding tendency within 3 months before enrollment, such as hemoptysis of 2.5ml or more per day, gastrointestinal bleeding, esophageal varices with bleeding risk, hemorrhagic gastric ulcer or vasculitis, etc. If the fecal occult blood is positive in the baseline period, it can be watched, then gastroscope is needed for those fecal occult blood is still positive. If the gastroscope indicates severe esophageal varices, it cannot be enrolled, except for those who have undergone gastroscopy within a month or less to exclude such cases);
11. Events of arterial/venous thrombosis occurring within the first 6 months of enrollment, such as cerebrovascular accidents (including transient ischemic attacks, cerebral hemorrhage, cerebral infarction), deep vein thrombosis, and pulmonary embolism;
12. There are known hereditary or acquired bleeding and thrombophilia (such as hemophilia patients, coagulopathy, thrombocytopenia, etc.);
13. Urine routine indicates that urine protein ≥ ++ and 24-hour urine protein amount \> 1.0g was confirmed;
14. The patient has active infection, unexplained fever (≥38.5 °C) within 3 days before administration, or baseline white blood cell count\>15×109/L; 15 Patients with congenital or acquired immunodeficiency (such as HIV-infected patients);
16\. HBV-DNA\>2000 IU/ml (or 104 copies/ml); or HCV-RNA\>103 copies/ml; or HBsAg+ and anti-HCV antibody positive patients; 17. The patient has had other malignant tumors in the past 3 years or at the same time (except for cured skin basal cell carcinoma and cervical carcinoma in situ); 18. Patients with bone metastases who had received palliative radiotherapy \>4% of the bone marrow area within 4 weeks prior to participation in the study; 19. Patients have previously received other anti-PD-1 antibody therapy or other immunotherapy against PD-1/PD-L1, or have received apatinib before; 20. Inoculation of a live vaccine within less than 4 weeks prior to study or possibly during the study period; 21. Pregnant or lactating women, or women of childbearing age who are unwilling to take contraceptive measures; 22. According to the investigators, the patient has other factors that may affect the results of the study or lead to the termination of the study, such as alcohol abuse, drug abuse, other serious diseases (including mental illness) requiring combined treatment, and serious laboratory tests, abnormalities, accompanied by factors such as family or society, which may affect the safety of enrolled patients.
18 Years
70 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Jiangsu HengRui Medicine Co., Ltd.
INDUSTRY
Sun Yat-sen University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Yang-kui Gu
Associate Professor
Locations
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Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center
Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Lyu N, Kong Y, Mu L, Lin Y, Li J, Liu Y, Zhang Z, Zheng L, Deng H, Li S, Xie Q, Guo R, Shi M, Xu L, Cai X, Wu P, Zhao M. Hepatic arterial infusion of oxaliplatin plus fluorouracil/leucovorin vs. sorafenib for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma. J Hepatol. 2018 Jul;69(1):60-69. doi: 10.1016/j.jhep.2018.02.008. Epub 2018 Feb 20.
He M, Li Q, Zou R, Shen J, Fang W, Tan G, Zhou Y, Wu X, Xu L, Wei W, Le Y, Zhou Z, Zhao M, Guo Y, Guo R, Chen M, Shi M. Sorafenib Plus Hepatic Arterial Infusion of Oxaliplatin, Fluorouracil, and Leucovorin vs Sorafenib Alone for Hepatocellular Carcinoma With Portal Vein Invasion: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Oncol. 2019 Jul 1;5(7):953-960. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2019.0250.
Other Identifiers
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TRIPLET
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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