| Literature DB >> 22366832 |
Ayman A Abdo1, Mazen Hassanain, AbdulRahman AlJumah, Ashwaq Al Olayan, Faisal M Sanai, Hamad A Alsuhaibani, Huda Abdulkareem, Khalid Abdallah, Mohammad AlMuaikeel, Mohammad Al Saghier, Mohammad Babatin, Monther Kabbani, Shouki Bazarbashi, Peter Metrakos, Jordi Bruix.
Abstract
Recognizing the significant prevalence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in Saudi Arabia, and the difficulties often faced in early and accurate diagnoses, evidence-based management, and the need for appropriate referral of HCC patients, the Saudi Association for the Study of Liver diseases and Transplantation (SASLT) formed a multi-disciplinary task force to evaluate and update the previously published guidelines by the Saudi Gastroenterology Association. These guidelines were later reviewed, adopted and endorsed by the Saudi Oncology Society (SOS) as its official HCC guidelines as well. The committee assigned to revise the Saudi HCC guidelines was composed of hepatologists, oncologists, liver surgeons, transplant surgeons, and interventional radiologists. Two members of the task force served as guidelines editors. A wide based search on all published reports on all aspects of the epidemiology, natural history, risk factors, diagnosis, and management of HCC was performed. All available literature was critically examined and available evidence was then classified according to its strength. The whole document and the recommendations were then discussed in detail by members and consensus was obtained. All recommendations in these guidelines were based on the best available evidence, but were tailored to the patients treated in Saudi Arabia. We hope that these guidelines will improve HCC patient care and enhance the multidisciplinary care needed for these patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22366832 PMCID: PMC6086640 DOI: 10.5144/0256-4947.2012.174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Saudi Med ISSN: 0256-4947 Impact factor: 1.526
Figure 1Diagnostic algorithm for HCC.
The Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) staging system.
| BCLC stage | Performance status | Tumor features | Liver function |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| A1 | 0 | Single <5 cm | No portal hypertension |
| A2 | 0 | Single <5 cm | Portal hypertension, normal bilirubin |
| A3 | 0 | Single <5 cm | Portal hypertension, abnormal bilirubin |
| A4 | 0 | 3 tumors <3 cm | Not applicable |
| B | 0 | Large multinodular | Child-Pugh A-B |
| C | 1–2 | Vascular invasion or metastases | Child-Pugh A-B |
| D | 3–4 | Any | Child-Pugh C |
Figure 2The BCLC staging system and treatment algorithm.
Surveillance recommendations.
| Strongly Recommended | Probably recommended |
|---|---|
|
| |
| HBV cirrhosis | HBV non cirrhotic above 45 years |
| HCV cirrhosis | HBV non-cirrhotic with family history of HCC |
| Cirrhosis secondary to other causes | HBV non-cirrhotic with high viral load |
| HBV non-cirrhotic with indications of advanced fibrosis | |
| Grade A | Recommendation based on at least one high quality randomized controlled trial or at least one high quality meta-analysis of well-done randomized controlled trials. |
| Grade B | Recommendation based on high quality case-control or cohort studies OR a high quality systematic review. |
| Grade C | Recommendation based on non-analytical studies (case reports or case series). |
| Grade D | Recommendations based on expert opinion only. |