Dr. Pyrsopoulos noted that a strategy of sorafenib followed by regorafenib would combine two treatments, each of which in clinical trials had a median overall survival approaching 11 months.
“In essence, you have an approximate 2-year survival,” he said.
More agents are under investigation, including lenvatinib, another multikinase inhibitor. In results of a phase 3 randomized trial presented at the 2017 meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, lenvatinib was noninferior to sorafenib in overall survival, with treatment-related adverse effects such as hypertension and diarrhea that were expected based on previous experience with the drug, investigators said.
Cancer immunotherapy is making inroads into HCC. Just a few months after approving regorafenib, the FDA granted approval to nivolumab, a PD-1 inhibitor, for patients with HCC previously treated with sorafenib. The September 2017 approval of this checkpoint inhibitor was based in part on data from the CheckMate-040 trial that included a 14.3% response rate in the 154-patient subgroup of patients who had progressive disease on sorafenib or were intolerant of the treatment.