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A randomised controlled trial of Standard Of Care versus RadioAblaTion in Early Stage HepatoCellular Carcinoma (SOCRATES HCC)

Authors :
Alan Wigg
Jonathan Tibballs
Richard Woodman
Katherine Stuart
Hien Le
Stuart K. Roberts
John K. Olynyk
Simone I. Strasser
Michael Wallace
Jarad Martin
Annette Haworth
Nicholas Hardcastle
Kee Fong Loo
Colin Tang
Yoo Young Lee
Julie Chu
Richard De Abreu Lourenco
Adam Koukourou
Diederick De Boo
Kate McLean
Jackie Buck
Rohit Sawhney
Amanda Nicoll
Anouk Dev
Marnie Wood
Alicia Braund
Martin Weltman
Richard Khor
Miriam Levy
Tim Wang
Michael Potter
James Haridy
Ashok Raj
Oliver Duncan
Amany Zekry
Natalie Collier
James O’Beirne
Catherine Holliday
Yuvnik Trada
Jaw Tronidjaja
Jacob George
David Pryor
Source :
BMC Cancer, Vol 24, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
BMC, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract Background Therapeutic options for early-stage hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in individual patients can be limited by tumor and location, liver dysfunction and comorbidities. Many patients with early-stage HCC do not receive curative-intent therapies. Stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy (SABR) has emerged as an effective, non-invasive HCC treatment option, however, randomized evidence for SABR in the first line setting is lacking. Methods Trans-Tasman Radiation Oncology Group (TROG) 21.07 SOCRATES-HCC is a phase II, prospective, randomised trial comparing SABR to other current standard of care therapies for patients with a solitary HCC ≤ 8 cm, ineligible for surgical resection or transplantation. The study is divided into 2 cohorts. Cohort 1 will compromise 118 patients with tumors ≤ 3 cm eligible for thermal ablation randomly assigned (1:1 ratio) to thermal ablation or SABR. Cohort 2 will comprise 100 patients with tumors > 3 cm up to 8 cm in size, or tumors ≤ 3 cm ineligible for thermal ablation, randomly assigned (1:1 ratio) to SABR or best other standard of care therapy including transarterial therapies. The primary objective is to determine whether SABR results in superior freedom from local progression (FFLP) at 2 years compared to thermal ablation in cohort 1 and compared to best standard of care therapy in cohort 2. Secondary endpoints include progression free survival, overall survival, adverse events, patient reported outcomes and health economic analyses. Discussion The SOCRATES-HCC study will provide the first randomized, multicentre evaluation of the efficacy, safety and cost effectiveness of SABR versus other standard of care therapies in the first line treatment of unresectable, early-stage HCC. It is a broad, multicentre collaboration between hepatology, interventional radiology and radiation oncology groups around Australia, coordinated by TROG Cancer Research. Trial registration anzctr.org.au, ACTRN12621001444875, registered 21 October 2021.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712407
Volume :
24
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6d523d1c82814f78b6224ff1b323717f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-024-12504-2