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Atezolizumab-bevacizumab plus Y-90 TARE for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma: preclinical rationale and ongoing clinical trials
Alessandro Di Federico
ORCID Icon, Alessandro Rizzo
, Riccardo Carloni
, Andrea De Giglio
, Riccardo Bruno
, Dalia Ricci
& show all
Received 28 Sep 2021, Accepted 18 Nov 2021, Accepted author version posted online: 19 Nov 2021, Published online: 01 Dec 2021
Download citation https://doi.org/10.1080/13543784.2022.2009455 CrossMark Logo CrossMark
ABSTRACT
Introduction
The treatment algorithm of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has evolved since the introduction of immunotherapy. The IMbrave150 trial set atezolizumab-bevacizumab as a new standard-of-care first-line treatment for unresectable HCC patients. However, for patients with intermediate or advanced stage with portal vein thrombosis but without distant metastases, 90Yttrium transarterial radioembolization (90Y-TARE) is considered the treatment of choice.
Areas Covered
We discuss the main evidence regarding the use of 90Y-TARE in HCC, the recent progress of immunotherapy in this tumor, and the preclinical rationale of combining VEGF blockade with the other two treatment strategies.
Expert opinion
HCC has an extremely heterogeneous tumor immune microenvironment. This may explain the inconsistent outcomes obtained with immune-checkpoint inhibitors. The identification of patients who could benefit most from immunotherapy is crucial; however, reliable markers of response are lacking. Radiation therapy and VEGF inhibition have an established synergism with immunotherapy, mainly linked to enhanced antigen presentation and reduced immunosuppressive immune infiltrate. Combining an immune-checkpoint inhibitor with VEGF blockade and 90Y-TARE might hence overcome primary resistances observed when each of these treatments is administerd alone.
KEYWORDS: Hepatocellular carcinomaimmunotherapyVEGFatezolizumabbevacizumabradiation therapyTARE
Article highlights
90Y-TARE remains the pivotal treatment for BCLC B patients not suitable for other locoregional treatments or BCLC C with portal vein thrombosis and without metastasis.
VEGF promotes tumor vascularization and has immunosuppressive effects. High levels of VEGF induce the expression of PD-1 and other inhibitory molecules, such as Tim-3, CTLA-4, and Lag-3, on tumor-infiltrating CD8+ T cells.
Many preclinical studies documented enhanced tumor responses with the combination of RT and anti-VEGF agents.
SIRT can enhance the number of released tumor antigens and has a proven synergism with immunotherapy.
In the absence of predictive biomarkers to ICI for HCC patients and given the minority of patients who respond to single agent ICIs, combination strategies represent a promising approach to overcome primary resistance. |
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