Adjuvant therapy with Jianpi Huayu decoction improves overall and recurrence-free survival after hepatectomy for hepatocellular carcinoma: a retrospective propensity score-matching study

Front Pharmacol. 2023 Sep 25:14:1212116. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2023.1212116. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients experience high rates of recurrence following hepatectomy. Many herbal preparations used in traditional Chinese medicine have been shown to improve the postoperative condition of cancer patients. This retrospective study examined the efficacy and safety of Jianpi Huayu decoction (JPHYD) as adjuvant therapy for HCC following hepatectomy. HCC patients received postoperative management according to Chinese Society of Clinical Oncology recommendations, either alone (Control group) or in addition to daily JPHYD (1 week in hospital and 3 months after release). To reduce selection bias, we performed 1:1 propensity score matching between the Control and JPHYD groups. The main endpoint was recurrence-free survival (RFS), and secondary endpoints included overall survival (OS) and adverse event frequency. A total of 207 patients meeting inclusion criteria were enrolled, 127 in the Control group and 80 in the JPHYD group. Patients were then propensity score-matched, yielding each group of 80. Recurrence-free survival rate was significantly higher in the JPHYD group than in the Control group at 1 year (67.9% vs. 38.1%), 2 years (39.1% vs. 26.2%), and 3 years (31.3% vs. 26.2%) following hepatectomy (HR 0.5666 [95%CI, 0.3655 to 0.8784]; p = 0.0066). Additionally, OS was significantly higher in the JPHYD group than the Control group at 1 year (94.3% vs. 81.9%), 2 years (76.4% vs. 58.8%), and 3 years (66.3% vs. 51.4%) following hepatectomy (HR 0.5199 [95%CI, 0.2849 to 0.9490]; p = 0.027). Adverse events frequencies did not differ between the two groups. In conclusion, JPHYD can safely improve RFS and OS following hepatectomy for HCC.

Keywords: adjuvant therapy; hepatectomy; hepatocellular carcinoma; traditional Chinese medicine; tumor recurrence.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC 82274526), “First-class universities and disciplines of the world” and high-level university discipline reserve talent cultivation project of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine (A1-2601-22-415-023), the Guangzhou Municipal Science and Technology Project (202102010406), Science and Technology Research Project of Guizhou Provincial Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine (QZYY-2018-008), the Innovation Project of the First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine (2019IIT18) and the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province (2023A1515011069).