Abstract
4110 Background: The phase 3 CARES-310 trial is the first to demonstrate significant progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) benefits with immunotherapy plus an anti-angiogenic tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) over standard TKI as first-line treatment for uHCC. In the primary analysis of PFS (data cut-off [DCO], May. 10, 2021) and interim analysis of OS (DCO, Feb. 8, 2022), significant improvements were observed with camrelizumab (C; anti-PD-1 antibody) + rivoceranib (R; VEGFR2-TKI) vs. sorafenib (S). Here, we report updated data at the final analysis (FA), after an additional follow-up of ~16 mo. Methods: In this international, randomized, open-label, phase 3 trial, 543 patients with uHCC who had not previously received systemic treatment were randomized 1:1 to receive either C (200 mg, iv, q2w) + R (250 mg, po, qd) or S (400 mg, po, bid). As of Jun.14, 2023, 351 (65%) deaths occurred, and a protocol-specified FA was performed. Results: 272 patients were allocated to C+R and 271 to S. At DCO of FA, median follow-up was 22.1 mo in C+R group and 14.9 mo in S group. After end of study treatment, 36% of patients in C+R group and 42% in S group received subsequent targeted therapy; 17% and 36% received immunotherapy, respectively. Median OS was significantly prolonged with C+R vs . S (23.8 mo [95% CI 20.6-27.2] vs. 15.2 mo [95% CI 13.2-18.5]; hazard ratio (HR) 0.64 [95% CI 0.52-0.79]; 1-sided p <0.0001). OS rate with C+R vs.S was 49.0% vs. 36.2% at 24 mo, and 37.7% vs. 24.8% at 36 mo. OS benefits with C+R was generally consistent across subgroups, regardless of geographical region, race, and aetiology. Benefits in PFS, objective response rate (ORR) and duration of response (DoR) with C+R were also sustained after prolonged follow-up (Table). Safety data aligned with the interim OS analysis, with no new signals noted. Conclusions: At the protocol-specified FA, C+R continued to show clinically meaningful survival improvement compared with S, with manageable safety. The extended follow-up further confirmed the favorable benefit-to-risk profile of C+R, supporting it as a new first-line treatment option for uHCC. Clinical trial information: NCT03764293 . [Table: see text]
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