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- Jeffrey D Wayne, Gregory Y Lauwers, Iwao Ikai, Dorota A Doherty, Jacques Belghiti, Yoshio Yamaoka, Jean-Marc Regimbeau, David M Nagorney, Kim-Anh Do, Lee M Ellis, Steven A Curley, Raphael E Pollock, and Jean-Nicolas Vauthey.
- International Cooperative Study Group on Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Department of Surgical Oncology, the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
- Ann. Surg. 2002 May 1; 235 (5): 722731722-30; discussion 730-1.
ObjectiveTo determine preoperative predictors of survival that can guide the choice of treatment for patients with small hepatocellular cancers (HCCs).Summary Background DataThe treatment of patients with small (=5 cm in diameter) HCCs is controversial.MethodsA cohort of 249 patients (69 women, 180 men; median age 62 years) who underwent resection with curative intent for small HCC was identified from a multiinstitutional database. For each patient, the clinical data and pathology slides were reviewed. Six clinical factors (age, gender, preoperative alpha-fetoprotein level, hepatitis serology, number of tumors [single vs. multiple], and Child-Pugh score) and three pathologic factors (hepatitis activity score, fibrosis score, and Edmondson-Steiner tumor grade) that can be determined before surgery were correlated with survival. Log-rank tests and Cox proportional hazards modeling were used to determine factors influencing survival.ResultsThe median overall survival for the entire cohort was 4.2 years. The estimated overall 5- and 8-year survival rates were 41.1% and 19.8%, respectively. Multivariate Cox analysis indicated that fibrosis score, Edmondson-Steiner grade, and Child-Pugh score were simultaneously significant predictors of survival after resection. A prognostic scoring system based on these covariates was derived and applied to the entire cohort. Patients lacking all three risk factors were assigned a score of 1, patients with one risk factor were assigned a score of 2, and patients with two or three risk factors were assigned a score of 3. Pairwise log-rank tests indicated significant differences in survival between scores 1 and 2, scores 2 and 3, and scores 1 and 3. This scoring system retained its prognostic significance when a subset of 98 patients with positive hepatitis C serology was analyzed separately.ConclusionsPatients with small HCCs who will derive the least benefit from resection can be identified before surgery using a score based on tumor grade and the severity of underlying liver disease. In these patients, transplantation and/or ablation should be considered as possible alternative therapies.
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