| Literature DB >> 22655206 |
Sene Waly Raphael1, Zhang Yangde, Chen Yuxiang.
Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth most common cancer and the third cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide. Its incidence is clearly arising comprised by the prevalence of major risk factors mainly hepatitis B and hepatitis C. The population at risk is composed of chronic liver patients at the stage of extensive fibrosis or cirrhosis. The monitoring programs of this population have allowed early detection of disease management to promote a radical therapy. Understanding the carcinogenic process and the mastery of the staging systems remain essential keys in diagnosis and treatment of HCC. Recent advances in diagnosis and new treatments have made important impacts on the disease by increasing survival rates and improving quality of life for HCC patients. This paper outlines the different management aspects of HCC which include epidemiology, prevention, carcinogenesis, staging systems, diagnosis, surveillance, and the treatment.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22655206 PMCID: PMC3359687 DOI: 10.5402/2012/421673
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Oncol ISSN: 2090-5661
Figure 1The striking parallel geographical distribution of the incidence of chronic hepatitis B virus infection and that of hepatocellular carcinoma. (Source [6] with permission of the Pathologie Biologie Journal.)
Staging system and prognostic variables used in the staging systems in HCC (adapted from [68] with permission of the HPB (Oxford) journal).
| Classification | Type | Stage | Tumor stage | Liver function | Health status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Okuda stage | System | Stage I, II, III | 50% liver involvement | Bilirubin | — |
| French | Score | A: 0 points; | Portal invasion AFP | Bilirubin Alkaline phosphatase | Karnofsky |
| CLIP | Score | 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | Portal invasion 5/450% liver involvement AFP | Child-Pugh | — |
| BCLC staging | Staging | 0: Very early | Portal invasion | Child-Pugh | PST |
| TNM staging | System | Stage I, II, III | Morphology | Fibrosis | — |
| CUPI | Score | Low risk: score ≤1 | TNM | Ascites Bilirubin | Symptoms |
| JIS | Score | Stage I, II, III, IV | TNM | Child-Pugh | — |
Variables used in the Child-Pugh score (source [8]).
| Measure | 1 point | 2 points | 3 points |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total bilirubin, | <34 (<2) | 34–50 (2-3) | >50 (>3) |
| Serum albumin, g/L | >35 | 28–35 | <28 |
| INR | <1.7 | 1.71–2.20 | >2.20 |
| Ascites | None | Mild | Severe |
| Hepatic encephalopathy | None | Grade I-II (or suppressed with medication) | Grade III-IV (or refractory) |
Interpretation of the Child-Pugh score (source [8]).
| Points | Class | One-year survival | Two-year survival |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-6 | A | 100% | 85% |
| 7–9 | B | 81% | 57% |
| 10–15 | C | 45% | 35% |
Figure 2Barcelona-Clínic Liver Cancer staging classification and treatment schedule. PST: performance status test. N: nodules. M: metastases. PEI: percutaneous ethanol injection. *Cadaveric liver transplantation or living donor liver transplantation. (Source [78] with permission of The Lancet Journal.)