Topic Highlight
Copyright ©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.
World J Gastroenterol. Oct 21, 2014; 20(39): 14381-14392
Published online Oct 21, 2014. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i39.14381
Table 1 Treatment options for hepatocellular carcinoma within injured liver
Local ablation therapyOnly for small tumors (in size and number)
Liver resectionMost available and efficient treatment
Applicable to < 30% of all HCC patients
5-yr survival of 38%-61% depending on the tumor stage
80% of patients recur within five years after resection
Liver transplantationIdeal treatment for removal of existing tumor and underlying injured/preneoplastic tissue
Tumor progression while on waiting list
Patients with advanced/extensive HCC have very poor outcomes
Table 2 Summary of recent advances in liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma
Established
Screening and early detection for high-risk patients (i.e., with HCV or HBV infection, alcoholic, metabolic chronic liver disease, etc.)
Diagnosis with contrast-enhanced imaging for the detection of early lesions
Assessment of liver function (Child-Pugh classification, indocyanine green retention test, MELD score)
Modulation of residual liver function with preoperative portal vein embolization
Anatomic resection removing undetectable disseminated tumor foci in the same portal territory
Under discussion
Three dimensional-CT-assisted preoperative surgical planning facilitates:
Unconventional types of liver resection
Laparoscopic liver resection could be beneficial:
For patients with severe liver dysfunction with lower morbidity
For repeat resection
As a bridging therapy for liver transplantation
Under trial or proposal
Adjuvant and/or combined therapy for advanced tumor
Sorafenib
Intraarterial 5-FU plus IFN therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma with VTT
Table 3 Summary of recent advances in liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma
EstablishedUnder discussionUnder trial or proposal
Criteria for listing candidateThe Milan criteria: Solitary tumor of ≤ 5 cm or up to 3 nodules ≤ 3 cm 5-yr survival of 70% with recurrence in less than 10%The UCSF criteria: Single tumors ≤ 6.5 cm or 2–3 tumors ≤ 4.5 cm, with a total tumor diameter ≤ 8 cmAdd parameters for biologic features of tumors related to risk of recurrence (AFP, PIVKA-II, etc.) Expansion of criteria for living donor-LT
Management on the waiting list (about 40% dropout rate at 12 mo)Local ablation therapy and TACE are performed without solid evidenceDifferent models have been developed to quantify the risk of death in neoplastic and non-neoplastic patients Association with liver resection: "bridging resection" to transplantation and "salvage transplantation" following resectionApplication of living donor-LT to shorten the waiting time Candidate selection with information from precedent therapy (histologic specimen, response to locoregional therapy, etc.)
Table 4 Overview of current outcomes of liver resection and liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma
Liver resection
Overall survival after liver resection
1 yr3 yr5 yr
87.8%69.2%53.4%(Japanese registry, n = 27062)[16]
90% 72% 56% (Multi-center study of the HCC East-West Study Group, n = 2046)[5]
Disease free survival after liver resection
67%38%23%(Multi-centrer study of the hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) East-West Study Group, n = 2046)[5]
90 d mortality rate: 2.7% Morbidity rate: 42% (Multi-central study of the HCC East-West Study Group, n = 2046)[5]
Overall survival of the patients with massive portal vein invasion after liver resection
50.4%25.8%18.4%(Japanese registry, n = 976)[16]
Liver transplantation
Overall survival after liver transplantation
1 yr3 yr5 yr
Within Milan
91%85%79%(72% of 5 yr DFS, UCLA, n = 467)
60.1%(Multi-centrer study of 14 French institutes, n = 479)
Beyond Milan and Within UCSF
88%74%64%(64% of DFS, UCLA, n = 467)
45.6%(Multi-center study of 14 French institutes, n = 479)
Beyond UCSF
71%49%41%(UCLA, n = 467)
34.7%(Multi-central study of 14 French centers, n = 479)
30 d mortality rate: 5.3% Re-transplantation rate: 4.2% (UCLA, n = 467)