Actively Recruiting
Hepatic Arterial Infusion Chemotherapy and Immunotherapy for Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Led by Zhejiang Cancer Hospital · Updated on 2025-05-23
10
Participants Needed
2
Research Sites
95 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Dear Sir/Madam, We would like to invite you to participate in this clinical research, which has been approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of Zhejiang Cancer Hospital. This informed consent form provides you with detailed information to help you decide whether or not to participate in this study. Please read it carefully, and ensure you fully understand it or get satisfactory answers to your questions before making your decision. If you have any questions, please feel free to consult the researchers, and we will provide you with comprehensive explanations. Hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy (HAIC) has recently become a popular local treatment method for liver cancer. A large Phase III clinical study from Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center demonstrated that in a randomized comparison of HAIC versus transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) for unresectable large hepatocellular carcinoma (≥7 cm), the objective response rate (ORR) for HAIC was 46%, while TACE had an ORR of only 18%, with a statistically significant difference between the two. Additionally, HAIC showed advantages over TACE in terms of progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS), reducing the risk of disease progression by 43% and the risk of death by 42%. In subgroups based on age, sex, performance status, alpha-fetoprotein levels, tumor size, and number of tumors, HAIC consistently demonstrated superior PFS and OS. A study from Taiwan indicated that for patients with advanced liver cancer with portal vein tumor thrombus, the ORR for the HAIC group reached 22.86%, compared to 26.09% for those using immune checkpoint inhibitors alone, and an ORR of 50.00% for the group receiving HAIC combined with immune checkpoint inhibitors. FOLFOX (fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin) has shown positive results as a systemic treatment regimen for advanced liver cancer, with an ORR of 8.15%, a PFS of 2.93 months, and an OS of 6.47 months in comparative studies. When used as a treatment option in advanced liver cancer through hepatic artery infusion, its ORR increased to 31.5%, PFS to 7.8 months, and OS to 13.9 months. Common immune checkpoint inhibitors include PD-1 monoclonal antibodies and PD-L1 monoclonal antibodies. PD-1 antibodies prevent immune evasion by blocking PD-1 on immune cells, while PD-L1 antibodies block PD-L1 on tumor cells to inhibit their interaction, thus preventing immune evasion. Therefore, PD-1 monoclonal antibodies primarily target immune cells, while PD-L1 monoclonal antibodies primarily target tumor cells. This leads us to attempt hepatic artery infusion of PD-L1 monoclonal antibodies, utilizing a high-concentration saturation infusion method to maximally block PD-L1 on tumor cells and reduce tumor immune evasion. Concurrently, combining FOLFOX-HAIC localized chemotherapy leads to the release of tumor necrosis antigens, facilitating immune system activity. Thus, we aim to utilize hepatic artery infusion to deliver both PD-L1 monoclonal antibodies and chemotherapy into the liver, killing tumors with high concentrations of chemotherapy, which will lead to antigen release that aids subsequent immune drug effectiveness while reducing suppressive factors in the immune microenvironment, such as Tregs and M2 macrophages. This approach will help change the inhibitory status of the immune microenvironment and provide a foundation for subsequent immunotherapy. In BCLC staging, stage A patients and some stage B patients have resectable liver cancer. However, factors affecting tumor staging, such as maximum tumor diameter and tumor quantity, are also considered high-risk recurrence factors in clinical models. Therefore, later tumor staging itself is a high-risk factor for tumor recurrence. In 2009, Professor Mazzaferro and colleagues proposed the Up-to-Seven criteria (the sum of maximum tumor diameter and tumor number not exceeding 7). Patients who met this criteria and received liver transplantation had a five-year survival rate as high as 71%. Liver cancer patients exceeding the Up-to-Seven criteria are considered unsuitable candidates for liver transplantation, as exceeding this limit indicates a poor tumor biological behavior. Furthermore, the criteria align with the primary surgical treatment staging (CNLC Ia-IIa) recommended in the "Primary Liver Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment Guidelines (2024 Edition)" published by China's National Health Commission. Therefore, we plan to conduct a neoadjuvant study targeting resectable liver cancer exceeding the Up-to-Seven criteria, using hepatic artery chemotherapy combined with immune checkpoint inhibitor (PD-L1 monoclonal antibody) infusion as the treatment regimen.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Hepatic Arterial Infusion Chemotherapy and Immunotherapy for Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Aged between 18 and 75 years
- Diagnosed with hepatocellular carcinoma meeting EASL/AASLD criteria with no prior systemic chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapy, or other anti-tumor treatments
- BCLC Stage A or B liver cancer beyond the Up-to-Seven criteria but considered resectable with negative margins and sufficient liver volume
- ECOG performance status score of 0 before first treatment
- Liver function classified as Child-Pugh Class A and ICG retention rate at 15 minutes ≤ 10%
- Estimated survival time of at least 6 months
- Adequate organ function to tolerate surgery, including hemoglobin ≥ 90 g/L, neutrophils ≥ 1.5 × 10⁹/L, platelets ≥ 100 × 10⁹/L; liver enzymes ≤ 5 times ULN; alkaline phosphatase ≤ 2.5 ULN; serum albumin ≥ 30 g/L; serum creatinine < 1.5 ULN; INR ≤ 2 or PT limit ≤ 6 seconds; creatinine clearance ≥ 60 mL/min
- Male and female participants with reproductive potential must agree to use effective contraception during the study
- Signed consent to provide stored blood samples, tumor tissue, or fresh biopsy specimens
You will not qualify if you...
- Pathological diagnosis other than hepatocellular carcinoma
- Prior liver cancer treatments including chemotherapy, radiotherapy, radiofrequency ablation, interventional therapies, targeted therapy, immunotherapy, or surgery (except non-tumor surgeries or diagnostic biopsies)
- Tumor assessed as unresectable before surgery
- Hepatitis B virus DNA > 2000 copies/ml or hepatitis C virus RNA > 1000
- Long-term use of systemic hormones (> 10 mg prednisone/day) or other immunosuppressive therapy
- Significant bleeding events or bleeding tendency within 3 months prior or current use of thrombolytic/anticoagulant treatment
- History of autoimmune diseases such as lupus or rheumatoid arthritis
- Active severe infections including tuberculosis or active autoimmune diseases
- Uncontrolled diabetes (fasting glucose ≥ 10 mmol/L), severe lung diseases or interstitial lung disease (except resolved radiation pneumonitis)
- Clinically significant cardiovascular disease or poorly controlled hypertension (≥ 140/90 mmHg)
- Recipients of renal replacement therapy
- Other malignancies within last 5 years except cured basal cell carcinoma or cervical carcinoma in situ
- Conditions preventing tolerance of surgery
- Allergic reactions to study drug components
- Alcohol dependence, mental illness, pregnancy, breastfeeding, or other conditions unsuitable for trial participation
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
Complete this quick 3-step screening to check your eligibility
Trial Site Locations
Total: 2 locations
1
Zhejiang Cancer Hospital
Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China, 310002
Not Yet Recruiting
2
Zhejiang Cancer Hospital
Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China, 310002
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
Y
Yuhua Prof. Zhang, M.D.
CONTACT
J
Jia Wu
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
NA
Model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary Purpose
TREATMENT
Number of Arms
1
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