fig1

Neoplastic macrovascular invasion represents an independent risk factor for dismal survival in sorafenib treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma

Figure 1. Overall survival (OS) of the whole patient population and survival according to risk factors. (A) Median OS for sorafenib treated patients was 8.5 months; (B) presence of macroscopic neoplastic vascular invasion of the portal venous system, present in 56% of subjects, was a strong negative predictor on survival, with a median OS of 5.5 vs. 12 months observed in patients without neoplastic thrombosis; (C) a duration of sorafenib treatment beyond median time of 2.5 months positively influenced outcome (median OS 11 vs. 3.5 months); (D) analysis of radiological response rate at 8 weeks of treatment showed a significant impact on survival: median OS was 12.5 months in subjects with stable disease or partial response and 9.5 months in progressive disease patients; (E) dose reduction showed a benefit on survival (median OS 11 vs. 5 months); (F) sorafenib daily dose below median (800 mg) was associated with better survival (median OS 10.5 vs. 6 months)

Hepatoma Research
ISSN 2454-2520 (Online) 2394-5079 (Print)

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