Overview of Hepatocellular Carcinoma Treatment
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common primary liver malignancy and typically develops in the setting of chronic liver disease or cirrhosis. The treatment landscape has evolved dramatically with multiple FDA-approved systemic therapies now available. Early-stage disease is managed with curative-intent approaches including resection, liver transplantation, or ablation. For advanced HCC, atezolizumab plus bevacizumab has become the preferred first-line regimen based on superior survival compared to sorafenib. Multiple tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are available for first-line and subsequent lines of therapy.
Treatment Approach by Stage
Very Early/Early Stage (BCLC 0-A)
- Resection for preserved liver function, solitary tumor, no portal hypertension
- Liver transplantation for Milan criteria (single β€5 cm or 2-3 tumors β€3 cm)
- Ablation (RFA, MWA) for non-surgical candidates with preserved liver function
Intermediate Stage (BCLC B)
- Transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) or radioembolization (TARE)
- Consider systemic therapy if TACE-refractory
- Combination locoregional + systemic therapy emerging
Advanced Stage (BCLC C) - First-line
- Atezolizumab + bevacizumab (preferred for Child-Pugh A without contraindications)
- Durvalumab + tremelimumab (alternative immunotherapy combination)
- Sorafenib or lenvatinib (TKI monotherapy alternatives)
Advanced Stage - Subsequent Lines
- After TKI: Regorafenib, cabozantinib, ramucirumab (if AFP β₯400)
- After immunotherapy: TKI options (sorafenib, lenvatinib, cabozantinib)
- Pembrolizumab for MSI-H/dMMR (rare in HCC)
Epidemiology & Impact
Hepatocellular carcinoma accounts for approximately 80% of primary liver cancers, with approximately 43,590 new cases and 30,520 deaths expected in 2025. NASH/MASLD is now the fastest-growing risk factor, replacing HCV. Other risks include HBV, alcoholic cirrhosis, and aflatoxin. Approximately 80% develops in cirrhosis. Five-year survival is approximately 23%, limited by treating both cancer and underlying liver disease.
Molecular Biology & Biomarkers
HCC has two major molecular classes: proliferation (HBV-associated, TP53 mutations, aggressive) and non-proliferation (alcohol/HCV-associated, CTNNB1 mutations, better prognosis). VEGF pathway activation drives efficacy of anti-angiogenics. No single targetable oncogene dominates most HCCs, making biomarker-directed therapy challenging. AFP remains an important diagnostic and prognostic marker.
Evolving Treatment Landscape
Atezolizumab-bevacizumab (IMbrave150) is the first-line standard for unresectable HCC. Tremelimumab-durvalumab (HIMALAYA STRIDE) is an alternative. TKIs remain important across lines. Curative options for early-stage include resection, transplant (Milan criteria), and ablation. TACE is standard for intermediate-stage.