Liver Cancer (Feb 2022)

Final Results of TACTICS: A Randomized, Prospective Trial Comparing Transarterial Chemoembolization Plus Sorafenib to Transarterial Chemoembolization Alone in Patients with Unresectable Hepatocellular Carcinoma

  • Masatoshi Kudo,
  • Kazuomi Ueshima,
  • Masafumi Ikeda,
  • Takuji Torimura,
  • Nobukazu Tanabe,
  • Hiroshi Aikata,
  • Namiki Izumi,
  • Takahiro Yamasaki,
  • Shunsuke Nojiri,
  • Keisuke Hino,
  • Hidetaka Tsumura,
  • Teiji Kuzuya,
  • Norio Isoda,
  • Michihisa Moriguchi,
  • Hajime Aino,
  • Akio Ido,
  • Naoto Kawabe,
  • Kazuhiko Nakao,
  • Yoshiyuki Wada,
  • Sadahisa Ogasawara,
  • Kenichi Yoshimura,
  • Takuji Okusaka,
  • Junji Furuse,
  • Norihiro Kokudo,
  • Kiwamu Okita,
  • Philip James Johnson,
  • Yasuaki Arai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000522547

Abstract

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Introduction Several clinical trials comparing the efficacy and safety of transarterial chemoembolisation (TACE) plus molecular-targeted agents versus TACE alone revealed no clinical benefits in progression-free survival (PFS) or overall survival (OS). Here, we report the final OS analysis from the TACTICS trial, which previously demonstrated significant improvement in PFS with TACE plus sorafenib in patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) (NCT01217034). Methods Patients with unresectable HCC were randomised to a TACE plus sorafenib group(N=80) or a TACE alone group(N=76). Patients in the combination treatment group received sorafenib 400 mg once daily for 2–3 weeks before TACE, followed by 800 mg once daily during on-demand conventional TACE sessions until time to untreatable progression. In this trial, TACE-specific PFS was used. TACE-specific PFS is defined as the time from randomization to progressive disease (PD) or death from any cause, and PD was defined as untreatable (UnTACEable) progression, caused by the inability of a patient to further receive or benefit from TACE for reasons that include intrahepatic tumor progression (25% increase vs baseline) according to RECICL, the detection of extrahepatic spread, vascular invasion or transient deterioration of liver function to Child-Pugh C after TACE. Results At the cut-off date of 31 July 2020, 131 OS events were observed. The median OS was 36.2 months with TACE plus sorafenib and 30.8 months with TACE alone (hazard ratio [HR]=0.861; 95% confidence interval [CI), 0.607–1.223; P=0.40, ΔOS, 5.4 months). The updated PFS was 22.8 months with TACE plus sorafenib and 13.5 months with TACE alone (HR=0.661; 95% CI, 0.466–0.938; P=0.02). Post-trial treatments with active procedures/agents were received by 47 (58.8%) patients in the TACE plus sorafenib group and 58 (76.3%) in the TACE alone group (P=0.01). In post hoc analysis, PFS and OS benefit were shown in HCC patients with tumor burden beyond up-to-7 criteria. Conclusions In TACTICS trial, TACE plus sorafenib did not show significant OS benefit over TACE alone; however, clinical meaningful OS prolongation and significantly improved PFS was observed. Thus, the TACE plus sorafenib can be considered a choice of treatment in intermediate stage HCC, especially in patients with high tumor burden. Trial Registration: NCT01217034