Establishing hepatic decompensation as a meaningful clinical outcome during systemic therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma
Giuseppe Cabibbo, Ciro Celsa, Sherrie Bhoori, Thomas Reiberger, David James Pinato, Calogero Cammà
Abstract
Unlike other solid tumours, the prognosis of patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is dually influenced by tumour progression and liver dysfunction. Accumulating evidence suggests that clinically evident hepatic decompensating events impact on the prognosis of patients with HCC more profoundly than tumour progression. This observation is particularly relevant in the new era of highly effective immunotherapy, which can also be administered to patients with impaired hepatic function (i.e. higher albumin-bilirubin [ALBI] grade) and/or with clinical signs of portal hypertension, both indicating a high risk of hepatic decompensation. Thus, it is of the utmost clinical importance to develop practical strategies for prevention and management of decompensation in patients with HCC, which include a rigorous diagnostic workup and treatment of the underlying disease aetiology - which may allow for cirrhosis recompensation - and the use of non-selective beta blockers in those with portal hypertension. We propose that future trials should incorporate hepatic decompensation as a clinically meaningful and prognostically relevant intermediate endpoint to investigate the competing effects of decompensation and tumour progression on overall survival - the gold standard endpoint for the regulatory approval of systemic HCC therapy. Clinical practice should adopt an integrated and multifaceted treatment approach that addresses both the underlying liver disease and the superimposed cancer to optimise overall patient outcomes in the context of expanding therapeutic options.