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Non-transplantable Recurrence After Resection for Transplantable Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Implication for Upfront Treatment Choice

Authors :
Razvan Grigorie
Vincent Lam
Xu Feng Zhang
Irinel Popescu
Francesca Ratti
Sorin Alexandrescu
Alfredo Guglielmi
Thomas J. Hugh
Aklile Workneh
Silvia Silva
Olivier Soubrane
George A. Poultsides
Timothy M. Pawlik
Luca Aldrighetti
Guillaume Martel
Fabio Bagante
Yi Lv
Hugo Marques
Feng Xue
Zhang, X. -F.
Xue, F.
Bagante, F.
Ratti, F.
Marques, H. P.
Silva, S.
Soubrane, O.
Lam, V.
Poultsides, G. A.
Popescu, I.
Grigorie, R.
Alexandrescu, S.
Martel, G.
Workneh, A.
Guglielmi, A.
Hugh, T.
Aldrighetti, L.
Lv, Y.
Pawlik, T. M.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springerlink, 2022.

Abstract

Objectives: To identify the preoperative risk factors for prediction of non-transplantable recurrence (NTR) after tumor resection for early-stage hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) to assist in patient selection relative to upfront liver resection (LR) versus liver transplantation (LT). Methods: Patients who underwent curative resection for transplantable HCC and chronic liver disease were identified from an international multi-institutional database. NTR was defined as recurrence beyond the Milan or UCSF criteria, and the preoperative risk factors of NTR were investigated. Results: Among 293 patients with transplantable HCC within Milan criteria and 320 within UCSF criteria, 113 (38.6%) and 131 (40.9%) patients developed tumor recurrence, respectively. Among patients who recurred, NTR was present in 32 (28.3%) patients within Milan and 35 (26.7%) within UCSF criteria. When either Milan or UCSF criteria was adopted, three preoperative risk factors including liver cirrhosis, tumor size > 3 cm, and multiple lesions were consistently identified as risk factors associated with NTR after curative resection. By summing up the three factors, a scoring model was established and the incidence of NTR among patients with 0, 1 or ≥ 2 risk factors incrementally increased from 4.5%, 13.3% to 20.5% when Milan criteria was used, and from 4.5%, 12.4% to 33.9% when UCSF criteria was adopted. The model demonstrated very good discriminatory power on internal validation (n = 5,000) (c-index 0.689 for Milan criteria, and 0.715 for UCSF criteria). Conclusions: Whereas surgical resection may be optimal first-line treatment for patients with no or one risk factor, patients with ≥ 2 risk factors should be considered for upfront liver transplantation info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5083e352ca312396b586322cc87eb852