Chemoembolization is a recognized treatment strategy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) * classical chemoembolization consists in injecting an emulsion of an anticancer agent in Lipiodol® via the hepatic artery * doxorubicin, an anthracycline, is the most frequently used drug in lipiodol chemoembolization (LCE) * however, less than half of HCC respond favourably to classical lipiodol chemoembolization (LCE) with doxorubicin/Lipiodol® In this trial, we propose to introduce in clinical practice a strategy based on idarubicin to achieve a more effective antitumor effect for the following reasons, recently pointed out by our team: * idarubicin is an anthracycline that penetrates tumour cells more quickly and is more cytotoxic than doxorubicin on hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines * idarubicin is injected in a solution of embolization microspheres of a diameter of (300-500µm), which all the progressive and controlled release of the anticancer drug, whereas the doxorubicin/Lipiodol® emulsion is unstable
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
21
blood samples (5 ml) will be taken
Chemoembolization will take place in the Interventional Radiology room: the syringe, prepared at the pharmacy, will contain microspheres loaded with a defined dose of idarubicin. Then five millilitres of Visipaque® will be added to visualize the injection
CHU de DIJON
Dijon, France
Tolerance: toxicities will be defined according to the scale: National Cancer Institute - Common Toxicity Criteria for Adverse Events (NCI CTC AE v3.0) to determine the limiting dose
Patients will be hospitalized for 3 days starting from the date of the chemoembolization and will then be followed regularly for 2 months from the date of the chemoembolization (clinical, biological and radiological surveillance).
Time frame: total duration of participation for a patient: 2 months
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