Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Not yet recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Patients with hepatocellular carcinoma which undergone major hepatectomy will be randomized to either laparoscopic or open surgery groupMasking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Background: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the sixth most common malignancy in the world.The practice of screening by ultrasonography and serum alpha-fetoprotein concentration in cirrhotic patients and hepatitis B carriers has led to an increasing incidence of HCC. Hepatectomy, local ablation and...

Background: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the sixth most common malignancy in the world.The practice of screening by ultrasonography and serum alpha-fetoprotein concentration in cirrhotic patients and hepatitis B carriers has led to an increasing incidence of HCC. Hepatectomy, local ablation and liver transplantation are regarded as the mainstay of curative treatment for HCC according to international guidelines by EASL, AASLD and ESMO.The shortage of liver grafts has limited the application of liver transplantation. Hepatectomy is thus widely accepted as the treatment option of choice for patients with HCC and non cirrhotic liver. Major hepatectomy (resection of > 3 Couinaud's segments) is always needed when HCC is large or is close to major blood vessels within liver. With the advancements in techniques of hepatectomy and perioperative patient care, the operative mortality of open major hepatectomy (OMH) has reduced to < 5% in recent years. Nonetheless, OMH for HCC is still associated with major problems as follows: It is associated with significant morbidities. The morbidity rate after OMH remains high (30% - 40%) even in high-volume centres. Wound infection and bronchopneumonia are among the most common complications after hepatic resection. Long incision and vigorous retraction of the rib cage are required to achieve adequate exposure of the liver tumor during hepatic resection. As a result, sepsis due to chest complications and wound problems are frequently encountered. Furthermore, division of the porto-systemic collaterals in the anterior abdominal wall contributes to postoperative ascites, which is another common complication. It is associated with a high tumor recurrence rate, even when performed with a curative intent. The 3-year recurrence rate has been reported to be more than 50%. Most recurrences occur in the liver remnant, in the forms of intrahepatic metastasis or multicentric tumor recurrence. Risk factors related to recurrence include unfavorable tumor factors such as microscopic venous or capsular invasion. Hence, tumor cell dissemination could be the main mechanism of recurrence. In this context, manipulation of the tumor during OMH leading to tumor cell dissemination can potentially contribute to high tumor recurrence rate. Furthermore, it has been suggested that postoperative immunosuppression induced by surgical stress may induce tumor growth in the liver remnant. Laparoscopy has a well-defined role in the staging and diagnosis of hepatobiliary malignancies. However, laparoscopic hepatectomy has not yet been widely practiced, because of the technical difficulties in liver resection, difficulty in the control of hemorrhage during liver transection and retraction of the liver for optimum exposure. With the advanced laparoscopic techniques, much enthusiasm has been developed in laparoscopic major hepatectomy (LMH). Recent series have proven the feasibility and safety of LMH for HCC. The selection criteria of the reported series included tumor size up to 10cm and single or multiple tumors confined to one liver lobe. The overall conversion rates was around 10%. There was no hospital mortality and the morbidity rate was about 10%. Apart from the documented advantages of laparoscopic surgery (less wound and chest complications, and shorter hospital stay), theoretically, LMH carries oncological advantages over OMH. LMH may result in less surgical stress and immunosuppression due to less intraoperative blood loss than OMH. Moreover, using laparoscopic instruments, it involves minimal manipulation of the tumor and less cancer cells dissemination during surgery. Potentially, postoperative tumor recurrence could be reduced and hence patient survival could be prolonged. To date, only retrospective studies using propensity score matching to compare LMH with OMH were reported. In these study, the studied patient number was small (< 40) in each matched treatment arm and the reported 2-year overall (86% - 88% vs. 85% - 100%) and recurrence-free survival (72% - 83% vs. 81% - 85%) rates were comparable between OMH and LMH. Nevertheless, there is a trend that LMH is associated with better overall and recurrence-free survival than OMH. It is likely that these studies were underpowered (Type II error) to show the potential oncological benefits of LMH over OMH. Because of these limited data on LMH, according to EASL, AASLD and ESMO guidelines, its role for HCC is still not yet defined. In the sphere of laparoscopic hepatectomy, according to the European Guideline Meeting for Laparoscopic Liver Surgery (Southampton consensus), there was only limited data on short-term outcome but no data on long-term outcome of LMH. With these reasons, there is an urge for a prospective study aiming to define the role of LMH for HCC with respect to its potential oncological benefits. In the principle investigator's institution (the Department of Surgery, The Chinese University of Hong Kong), preliminary data using propensity score matching analysis on patients with HCC (median size = 4cm) undergone either laparoscopic (n = 112) or open hepatectomy (n = 224) (major hepatectomy accounts for 40.5%), the intraoperative blood loss (median: 159 mL vs. 419 mL), blood transfusion rate (0% vs. 4.5%) and morbidity rate (5.4% vs. 28.1%) were significantly lower in laparoscopic group than open group. The hospital mortality (0% vs. 0.4%), long-term overall (5-year: 56% vs. 42%) and recurrence free (5-year: 36% vs. 33%) survival rates were comparable between groups. (Supplementary information attached) With this experience, the principle investigator proposes an open labelled prospective multi-center randomized trial (AP-LAPO Trial) comparing LMH with OMH for HCC. This study involves 5 high-volume centres specialized in liver surgery and with facilities supporting LMH and OMH in Asia-Pacific region (Hong Kong, Sichuan, Guangzhou and Foshan). These centres perform at least 30 LMH or OMH per year (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, median no. = 51; Kwong Wah Hospital, median no. = 30; West China Medical School of Sichuan University, median no. 120; Eastern Hepatobiliary Surgery Hospital & Institute, median no. = 115; The First People's Hospital of Foshan, median no. = 102), and have achieved excellent perioperative and oncological outcome after LMH or OMH (operative mortality 1% - 2%; complication rate 14% - 23%; 2-year overall survival rate 85% - 88%; 2-year disease-free survival rate 81% - 84%). Objectives and hypothesis: The primary objective is to test the hypothesis that LMH is associated with less surgical stress, less immunosuppression and thus less tumor recurrence and better survival than OMH. The primary outcome measure is 2-year recurrence-free survival. The secondary outcome measures include hospital mortality, morbidity, quality of life and overall survival between groups. Besides, stress-related cytokines (interleukin-6 [IL-6] and immunosuppressive acidic protein[IAP]) will also be measured during the perioperative Sample size estimation: Based on a reported 2-year recurrence-free survival rate of 72% after OMH and an expected 88% after LMH (about 20% improvement) according to a previously reported series, 106 patients need to be recruited to each arm in order to demonstrate a statistically significant difference with a 80% power at the 0.05 level of 2-sided significant difference between laparoscopic and open hepatic resection, allowing a drop-out rate of 10%. This sample size will also allow detection of reduction of 2-year tumor recurrence from 50% in OMH group to 30% in LMH with a similar power and level of significance. The principle investigator's unit is a major referral center for management of HCC in Hong Kong, with more than 150 new cases seen per year. There are one other centers in Hong Kong and 3 centers in Mainland China, which are specialized in both laparoscopic and open surgery for patients with HCC, with referral patient number ranging from 50 to 200 per year. The planned number of patients recruited in each participating centres is as follows (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, N = 32; Kwong Wah Hospital, N = 20; West China Medical School of Sichuan University, N = 50; Eastern Hepatobiliary Surgery Hospital & Institute, N = 50; The First People's Hospital of Foshan, median no. = 60) It is therefore expected that recruitment can be completed in about 12 months. All patients will be observed for at least 24 months after treatment. Hence, the total period of study including follow-up is estimated to be about 3 years for the funding period. After the funding period, recruited patients will be followed up periodically up to 5 years after surgery to evaluate the long-term outcome. Statistical analysis: Statistical analysis will be performed using SPSS version 11.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, Ill). The 2-year recurrence-free survival (primary outcome) will be evaluated by Kaplan-Meier method and compared by the log-rank test between studied groups. Other secondary outcome measures will be compared using Chi-squared test or Fisher's exact test for categorical variables, and Mann-Whitney U test for continuous variables between groups. Overall survival is again computed by the Kaplan-Meier method and compared by the log-rank test between groups. P < 0.05 is considered statistically significant. Ethical consideration: All aspects of the study will be discussed with each subject during a phone interview or screening visit. An information sheet will be provided, and each subject will be given the opportunity to seek medical advice or to discuss the study with friends or family prior to involvement. Each volunteer will give written, informed consent, in accordance with the attached form, and the subjects will be free to withdraw from the study at any time. This study will be performed in accordance with the ethical standards of the Declaration of Helsinki of 1975 and its later versions. Ethics approval from the institutional review broad of individual center will be sought. Relevance to clinical applications: The proposed study is an open-labelled prospective multi-center randomized trial investigating the potential benefits of laparoscopic major hepatectomy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), as compared to conventional open surgery. It involves 5 high-volume surgery centers in the Asia-Pacific region, where the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma is high. The result of this study provides level 1 evidence on the best treatment option for HCC, which needs major hepatectomy. Such information will influence the evidence-based policy in professional practice in the management algorithm for HCC. Since postoperative complications and tumor recurrence are substantial after OMH, potential benefits of LMH tested in this study will help to alleviate these problems. Ultimately, the long-term survival of patients with HCC could be improved.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04852211
Collaborators
Health and Medicine Research Fund
Investigators
Not Provided