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After 9 years of failed trials for once-promising drugs, regorafenib (Stivarga) has emerged as the clear choice for second-line therapy in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma after demonstrating survival improvements for patients whose disease has progressed after systemic treatment.
Jordi Bruix, MD, PhD
After 9 years of failed trials for once-promising drugs, regorafenib (Stivarga) has emerged as the clear choice for second-line therapy in advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) after demonstrating survival improvements for patients whose disease has progressed after systemic treatment, according to liver cancer experts.
Regorafenib’s success is set against a background of continued development of novel agents that may widen the treatment options for patients with advanced disease in the near future, speakers reported at the 10th International Liver Cancer Association (ILCA) Annual Conference in Vancouver, Canada.
The near-term potential includes a head-to-head comparison between lenvatinib (Lenvima) and sorafenib (Nexavar) in a first-line setting,1 and separate phase III studies versus placebo of cabozantinib (Cabometyx; Cometriq)2 and tivantinib in second-line settings,3 noted Ann-Lii Cheng, MD, PhD.
He also pointed to phase III trials of 2 PD-1 inhibitors, nivolumab (Opdivo)4 and pembrolizumab (Keytruda),5 as possible practice-changers in the next several years. Nivolumab is being tested against sorafenib in patients with advanced HCC who have not received systemic therapy, while pembrolizumab is being compared with placebo in previously treated patients.
Cheng, of the National Taiwan University College of Medicine, was joined on the podium in the discussion of the advanced disease paradigm by Jordi Bruix, MD, PhD, a professor of Medicine at the University of Barcelona and director of the Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) Group, which he founded. Bruix was the lead investigator for the pivotal RESORCE trial on regorafenib.
Key Clinical Trial Findings
Both Cheng and Bruix noted that research changes are needed for improved outcomes in HCC. Cheng emphasized that biomarkers, particularly an immune signature, must be identified to help guide therapy while Bruix stressed the importance of revising the standards by which tumor progression is judged.As it stands now, sorafenib is the only choice of systemic therapy for patients with advanced-stage HCC. Bruix said sorafenib is most effective for patients with stage C disease with symptoms including portal invasion and extrahepatic spread and Child-Pugh A-B scores, according to the BCLC algorithm, the most widely used staging system in the field.
The FDA approved sorafenib in 2007 for the treatment of patients with advanced, unresectable HCC based on a 3-month improvement in median overall survival (OS) compared with placebo (10.7 months vs 7.9 months; HR, 0.69).
Since then, phase III clinical trials have failed to register statistically significant improvements in OS in 5 first-line and 3 second-line studies involving targeted agents and, in 1 instance, chemotherapy regimens, according to Bruix.
That string of disappointments was broken earlier this year when Bruix and colleagues reported that regorafenib, which inhibits VEGF and multiple other kinases, improved median OS by 2.8 months versus placebo in the second-line setting.6 Bayer Pharmaceuticals submitted the RESORCE findings to the FDA and the European Medicines Agency for approval.
In the RESORCE trial, patients who received regorafenib (n = 379) achieved a median OS of 10.6 months compared with 7.8 months for participants (n = 194) who received placebo (HR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.50-0.79; 2-sided P <.001).
Progression-free survival was 3.1 months with regorafenib compared with 1.5 months for placebo (HR, 0.46; 95% CI, 0.37-0.56; 2-sided P <.001). Similarly, the time to progression (TTP) was 3.2 months for regorafenib compared with 1.5 months for placebo (HR, 0.44; 95% CI, 0.36-0.55; 2-sided P <.001).
Bruix noted, however, that some of the agents that faltered in prior trials showed improvements in TTP or disease control rates that did not translate into an advantage in OS. He said the HCC field has been beset by shifting guidelines for evaluating changes in tumor sizes and sites at a greater frequency than have definitions for other solid tumor types.
Immunotherapy Outlook
Instead, he said progression should be evaluated in HCC based upon patterns of progression. BCLC researchers correlated progression in imaging and survival among patients treated among 147 patients treated with sorafenib and identified 3 patterns of progression: growth in intrahepatic or new intrahepatic tumor, growth of extrahepatic lesion, and new extrahepatic or vascular invasion.7When it comes to immunotherapies under study, Bruix said in his presentation summary that “major hope has been placed in the benefits of immune treatment but data are still preliminary, and the optimistic feelings raised by the impact in other cancer types has to be validated in liver cancer.”
Cheng said there are so many emerging immunotherapy agents to explore that testing combinations likely to succeed in HCC is challenging. “Even with anti—PD-1 as a backbone, we have 9 or 10 categories of drugs that could be combined and, in each category, we have many, many drugs.”
As a result, immune subtyping will be an important facet of advancing immunotherapy. “In the future, we will have to identify immune signatures in the microenvironment and that is an even tougher question,” said Cheng. “There are spatial and temporal dynamic changes of the immune microenvironment so any attempt to try to use only a single biopsy to identify an immune signature may not be possible, at least in the near future.”
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