Review
Copyright ©2013 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastroenterol. Oct 28, 2013; 19(40): 6744-6756
Published online Oct 28, 2013. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i40.6744
Table 1 Characteristics and results of studies on risk of hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with autoimmune hepatitis,  1-antitrypsin deficiency and Wilson’s disease
Ref.Study designStudy periodPatient No.Duration follow-upResults
Autoimmune hepatitis
Yeoman et al[110]Prospective cohort study1971-2007243median: 11 yr (range 1-36)Annual HCC incidence: 1.1%
HCC occurred more often in cirrhotic patients (9.3% vs 3.4%, P = 0.048)
Wang et al[111]Prospective cohort studyUnknown124mean: 111HCC incidence: 1 per 350 patient-year
± 6 moHCC incidence in cirrhotics: 1 per 182 patient-year
Werner et al[112]Retrospective cohort study1990-2003473median: 8.8 yr (range 1-45)23-fold increased HCC risk compared to the general population. Only HCC in cirrhotics
Wong et al[113]Retrospective cohort study1999-2009322mean: 6.25 yrHCC incidence all patients: 459 per 100000 patient-year (0.5%/yr)
In cirrhotics: 1920 per 100000 patient-year (1.9%/yr)
Park et al[114]Retrospective cohort studyUnknown212 (88 cirrhotics)mean: 123HCC incidence in cirrhotics: 1 per 1002 patient-year. (0.1%/yr)
± 9 mo
Teufel et al[115]Retrospective cohort study1970-2009278 (89 cirrhotics)mean: 4.8 yr (in cirrhotic pts)No HCC observed in 431 cirrhotic patient-year
α 1-antitrypsin deficiency
Eriksson et al[116]Autopsy study1963-198238250NAIncreased HCC risk in patients with A1AD compared to controls. (OR = 20, 95%CI: 3.5-114.3)
(17 pts with A1AD)
Elzouki et al[117]Autopsy study1963-199450333NAIncreased HCC risk in patients with A1AD compared to controls (OR = 5.0, 95%CI: 1.6-15.8; P = 0.008). Only significant in males
(31 pts with A1AD)
Propst et al[118]Retrospective cohort study1990-1992Group 1: 240 cirrhotics with different etiologies (25% A1AD)UnknownNo significant differences in HCC prevalence between cirrhotic A1AD patients and cirrhotic subjects due to other causes
Group 2: 130 non-cirrhotic A1AD ptsNo HCC in non-cirrhotic A1AD patients
Wilson’s disease
Walshe et al[119]Retrospective cohort study1955-1987 1987-2000 1966-2002159range: 10-45 yr9 patients (6%) developed abdominal malignancies (2 × HCC). Higher incidence compared to the general population
Thattil et al[120]Case report and reviewNo limitationNANA19 published case reports of HCC in patients with Wilson’s disease
Table 2 Comparison of recommendations regarding hepatocellular carcinoma surveillance in guidelines
CharacteristicsAASLD guideline[19]EASL guideline[20]APASL guideline[21]
Recommended target populationCirrhotic HBV and HCV patientsCirrhotic patients with Child-Pugh stage A and BCirrhotic HBV and HCV patients
Alcoholic cirrhosisCirrhotic patients with Child-Pugh stage C awaiting liver transplantation
Stage 4 primary biliary cirrhosisNon-cirrhotic HBV carriers with active hepatitis or family history of HCC
Cirrhosis due to genetic hemochromatosisNon-cirrhotic patients with chronic hepatitis C and advanced liver fibrosis F3
Cirrhosis due to α 1-antitrypsin deficiency
HBV carriers of Asian origin (male > 40 yr, female > 50 yr)
African/North American Blacks with hepatitis B
HBV carriers with family history of HCC
Surveillance benefit uncertainHBV carriers younger than 40 (males) or
50 (females)
Hepatitis C and stage 3 fibrosis
Non-cirrhotic NAFLD
Surveillance modalityUSUSUS and AFP
Interval (mo)666