| Literature DB >> 29209611 |
Sebastiao N Martins-Filho1,2, Caterina Paiva1, Raymundo Soares Azevedo1, Venancio Avancini Ferreira Alves1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Histological grading typically reflects the biological behavior of solid tumors, thus providing valuable prognostic information. This is also expected in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), although limited access to biopsy samples and a lack of standardization might hinder its full predictive value in this cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Edmondson and Steiner; grading systems; hepatocellular carcinoma; histological grading; prognosis
Year: 2017 PMID: 29209611 PMCID: PMC5701623 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2017.00193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study selection process.
Figure 2Distribution of the studies according to the grading reference, number of tiers, and data analysis. There is a lack of consensus on the classification of hepatocellular carcinoma in the literature, illustrated by different grading systems and number of tiers.
Figure 3Individual grade distribution according to the reference subgroup and number of tiers. All groups represented show a higher distribution of the intermediate grades compared to the marginal ones. Two studies that were not included in the chart—WHO 4-tier (G1: 8.9%, G2: 45.5%, G3: 42.7% and G4: 2.8%) and NI 4-tier (G1: 7%, G2: 59%, G3: 32% and G4: 2%)—reproduced the distribution observed in the ES 4-tier category.
Figure 4Impact of the histological grade in outcome. Forest plot diagrams illustrating the impact of the ES classification on overall (A) and disease-free survival (B), and the impact of the WHO classification on overall survival (C).
Histological features from Edmondson and Steiner (ES) publication and WHO book.
| Reference | Grades | Architecture | Cytology | Other features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| World Health Organization ( | Well differentiated | Thin trabecular, frequent acinar structures | Minimal atypia | Fatty change is frequent |
| Moderately differentiated | Trabecular (3 or more cells in thickness) and acinar | Abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm, round nuclei with distinct nucleoli | Bile or proteinaceous fluid within acini | |
| Poorly differentiated | Solid | Moderate to marked pleomorphism | Absence of sinusoid-like blood spaces | |
| Undifferentiated | Solid | Little cytoplasm, spindle, or round-shaped cells | — | |
| Edmondson and Steiner ( | Grade I | — | — | Areas of carcinoma where distinction from hyperplastic liver is difficult |
| Grade II | Trabecular, frequent acini (lumen varying from tiny canaliculi to large thyroid-like spaces) | Resemblance to normal hepatic cells; larger nuclei; abundant acidophilic cytoplasm | Cell borders sharp and clear cut; acini containing bile or protein precipitate | |
| Grade III | Distortion of trabecular structure, acini less frequent than grade II | Larger, more hyperchromatic nuclei, granular but less acidophilic cytoplasm | Acini are less frequent; tumor giant cells may be numerous | |
| Grade IV | Medullary, less trabeculae, rare acini | Highly hyperchromatic nuclei, scanty cytoplasm, with fewer granules | Loss of cell cohesiveness; giant, spindle or short-plump cells can be found | |
Figure 5Potential approach for a new grading classification on HCC. Tumors would be classified into four grades for each histological feature and, depending on the combined scored, stratified in low or high grade. Each feature or their combination would then be cross-examined with the patterns of vascular invasion (micro and macrovascular), the expression of stem-like markers (e.g., Keratin 19) and even with the HCC molecular subclasses. Exemplified here are nuclear, nucleolar, and architectural grade, but other histological variables such as cellularity and even mitotic index could also be explored.