ID | 116246 |
Author |
Tomonari, Tetsu
Tokushima University
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Tanaka, Takahiro
Tokushima University
Okamoto, Koichi
Tokushima University
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Sogabe, Masahiro
Tokushima University
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Miyamoto, Hiroshi
Tokushima University
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Muguruma, Naoki
Tokushima University
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Kagiwada, Harumi
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
Kitazawa, Masashi
SOCIUM
Fukui, Kazuhiko
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology|SOCIUM
Horimoto, Katsuhisa
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology|SOCIUM
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Keywords | hepatocellular carcinoma
lenvatinib
sorafenib
hepatic reserve function
FGFR
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Content Type |
Journal Article
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Description | The efficacy and safety of lenvatinib (LEN) as a second/third-line treatment for unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) after sorafenib (SOR) therapy remains unknown. We evaluated the outcomes of second/third-line LEN treatment, investigated the sensitivity of a SOR-resistant HCC cell line (PLC/PRF5-R2) to LEN, and assessed their signal transduction pathways by protein array analysis. We retrospectively enrolled 57 patients with unresectable HCC. Fifty-three radiologically evaluated patients comprised 34 molecular-targeted agent (MTA)-naive (first-line), nine intolerant to SOR (second-line), and 10 resistant to regorafenib (third-line). The objective response rates (ORRs) were 61.8% in first-line, 33.3% in second-line, and 20.0% in third-line groups. The overall survival (OS) in the first-line was significantly longer than that in the third-line group (p < 0.05). Patients with better liver functional reserves (child score, ALBI grade) exhibited higher ORR and longer OS. The IC50 of LEN against PLC/PRF5-R2 was significantly higher than that against PLC/PRF5. LEN significantly inhibited more LEN-related signal transduction pathways in PLC/PRF5 than in PLC/PRF5-R2 cells. This suggests that LEN is active and safe as a second/third-line treatment for unresectable HCC. LEN seems more effective for patients with HCC with better hepatic reserve functions or before MTA-resistance is acquired because of the partial cross-resistance to SOR.
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Journal Title |
Oncotarget
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ISSN | 19492553
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Publisher | Impact Journals
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Volume | 11
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Issue | 26
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Start Page | 2531
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End Page | 2542
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Published Date | 2020-06-30
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Rights | This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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DOI (Published Version) | |
URL ( Publisher's Version ) | |
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language |
eng
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TextVersion |
Publisher
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departments |
University Hospital
Medical Sciences
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