Saturday, April 2, 2011

HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA ; THALIDOMIDE SHOWS EFFICACY AS ADJUVANT THERAPY

THALIDOMIDE SHOWS EFFICACY AS ADJUVANT THERAPY FOR HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA PATIENTS

Well-known drug provides new hope for difficult to treat liver cancer patients

Berlin, Germany, Saturday 02 April 2011: Thalidomide has shown potential to be used as the first adjuvant therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), according to data presented at the International Liver CongressTM 2011.1

A new study found thalidomide gave HCC patients who’d undergone grossly curative resection - surgical removal of the cancerous part of the liver - double the two-year disease free survival rate (65%) compared to placebo (33%).

However, the study did find that the two-year overall survival rate was comparable between patients treated with thalidomide and patients given placebo – 84.2% and 85.7% respectively.

Daniele Prati, EASL’s Scientific Committee Member and Press Committee Chairman, commented: “Current options for adjuvant therapy in HCC are very limited and clinical trial results have been disappointing. Thalidomide has already been proven to work well in a number of other areas and this study shows it could potentially benefit HCC patients who are particularly difficult to treat. Overall, it is important to continue research in evaluating adjuvant therapy in HCC.”

Surgery is the main form of treatment for HCC, but is only possible for a small proportion of those afflicted. Even after curative resection, recurrence is common and is the main cause of death. Adjuvant therapy - that is, chemotherapy after surgery – is thus attempted to try to improve outcomes.2

The study is promising because there is currently no adjuvant therapy for HCC patients following curative resection.

Indeed, the most up-to-date Cochrane Review of adjuvant therapies for HCC (conducted prior to this thalidomide study) found insufficient evidence to show that previously investigated adjuvant therapies increased survival for HCC, and only limited evidence to suggest that adjuvant therapy was useful in disease-free survival.2

In the double-blind, placebo controlled, randomized, comparative phase-II study, 42 patients were given 200mg per day oral dose of thalidomide (Arm A, 21 patients) or 200mg per day oral dose of placebo (Arm B, 21 patients). Patients started treatment within 6 weeks of complete tumor resection and carried on treatment for 12 months, or until they encountered disease recurrence, intolerably toxicity, or withdrew consent. Overall, thalidomide showed a good tolerability profile.

Thalidomide is currently approved by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the US for the treatment of multiple myeloma (a cancer of the bone marrow).3,4

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