4.5 Review

Pharmacokinetic considerations for angiogenesis inhibitors used to treat hepatocellular carcinoma: an overview

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Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17425255.2023.2272598

Keywords

Hepatocellular carcinoma; angiogenesis inhibitors; oral tyrosine kinase inhibitors; monoclonal antibodies; pharmacokinetics

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Anti-angiogenic drugs used in the treatment of advanced HCC have different pharmacokinetic characteristics and effectiveness. It is necessary to conduct more studies to understand the factors influencing pharmacokinetic parameters and improve individual therapeutic response. Additionally, the benefits and risks of systemic therapy for advanced HCC in patients with liver impairment should be evaluated.
IntroductionHepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth malignancy in terms of frequency and the fourth malignancy in terms of cancer-related death worldwide. Systemic therapy of advanced HCC has probably gone through the greatest wave of change in the last decade, with the introduction of several anti-angiogenic drugs and immune checkpoint inhibitors, able to significantly improve patients' prognosis.Areas coveredIn this review, we summarize the pharmacokinetic characteristic of the antiangiogenic drugs currently approved for the treatment of HCC, from oral tyrosine kinase inhibitors (sorafenib, lenvatinib, regorafenib and cabozantinib) to monoclonal antibodies (bevacizumab and ramucirumab), focusing on the main aspects that differ among compounds from the same class, on factors that can exert an influence on pharmacokinetic parameters and the main issues that could limit their clinical use.Expert opinionAnti-angiogenic drugs have different profiles in terms of bioavailability, metabolism, elimination and interindividual variability in their pharmacokinetics and effectiveness. More studies should be developed to address the intrinsic and extrinsic factors influencing pharmacokinetics parameters to improve the individual therapeutic response and, furthermore, to evaluate the benefit and the harm of systemic therapy for advanced HCC in selected patients with liver impairment.

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