Background: Thalidomide, an anti-angiogenic agent, does not have a good therapeutic effect for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma when used alone. Megestrol and interleukin-2 have been proposed as a palliative treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma. AIMS.: We assessed the effectiveness/safety of a combined therapy with thalidomide+megestrol+interleukin-2 in cirrhotic patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.
Patients and methods: Nine cirrhotic patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma received oral megestrol (160 mg/day) and thalidomide (from 50 mg/day to the maximal tolerated dose). Four patients also received subcutaneous interleukin-2 (1 million U/day for 21 days/month).
Results: The maximal tolerated dose of thalidomide was 150 mg/day. All patients complained of sedation and other neurological or digestive adverse effects. In all but one patient the adverse effects disappeared after thalidomide withdrawal or dose reduction. Interleukin-2 administration caused a flu-like syndrome and a reaction at the injection site. During treatment, alpha-fetoprotein increased in six patients, remained stable in two and decreased in one. Eight patients showed tumour progression and one had a stable disease. Eight patients died. The median survival was 9.9 (range 2.6-18.6) months.
Conclusion: In cirrhotic patients, the combined treatment with thalidomide+megestrol (+/-interleukin-2) does not control hepatocellular carcinoma growth, possibly due to the low tolerance to thalidomide and interleukin-2 preventing the use of appropriate dosages.