1. Assessment of long-term prognosis at detection of early hepatocellular carcinoma remains unsolved
- Author
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Fabio Piscaglia, Simona Leoni, Veronica Salvatore, Alessandro Cucchetti, Fabio Piscaglia, Veronica Salvatore, Simona Leoni, and Alessandro Cucchetti
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Radiofrequency ablation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Catheter ablation ,Gastroenterology ,Resection ,law.invention ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Early Hepatocellular Carcinoma ,In patient ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,not available ,Catheter Ablation ,Female ,Liver function ,business ,Surgical patients - Abstract
To the Editor: The study by Suh and coworkers [1] addresses a hot topic, namely the possibility to predict prognosis (recurrence and survival) in patients submitted to curative treatments for early hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The authors conclude that patients submitted to radiofrequency ablation are at higher risk of local intrahepatic recurrence in comparison to surgery and that survival is compromised in case of increased production of a-fetoprotein (AFP) by prothrombin, induced by vitamin K absence-II (PIVKA-II), compared to all other groups (not increased AFP by PIVKA-II product or surgical resection). We agree with the conclusion of the higher risk of recurrence, as we recently demonstrated [2], but in our view the second conclusion is not sufficiently supported by evidence. Moreover, some incorrect reporting of data prevent a full understanding of the study. Regarding the latter point, results about AFP and PIVKA-II were reported as mean values. This is unacceptable, as such data are not expected to follow a Gaussian distribution, thus, mean values are poorly or totally non-informative or may even be misleading under these circumstances. Median values have to be reported. Moreover, readers cannot understand how many patients had normal values of these two parameters. Secondly, the authors themselves point out that patients submitted to ablation had a slightly more compromised liver function than surgical patients. It is evident that cirrhotic patients with poorer liver function have a worse overall survival, regardless of the tumours status. We have recently shown in this Journal that resection may apparently provide better survival in early HCC, but only when entire patient series are analysed [2]. Such difference disappeared in very early HCC when patients were balanced in terms of background liver function and tumour features [2]. Suh and colleagues [1] did not show whether the four subgroups were superimposable in terms of highly relevant factors, such as liver function variables, tumour size and number, thus making the issue of survival questionable. This would be recommendable, especially in the two groups of patients, submitted to ablation, for which the information, derived from histology on which prognosis was designed, was not available. Thus, a re-analysis of the Korean data appears to be well-deserved before the conclusions, proposed by the authors, can be adopted.
- Published
- 2014
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