| Literature DB >> 33854987 |
Daniel Geh1, Quentin M Anstee2,3, Helen L Reeves2,3,4.
Abstract
Due to an increase in the obesity-associated metabolic syndrome of epidemic proportions, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is becoming a leading cause of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in western countries. This presents added challenges, as NAFLD-associated HCC tends to present at an advanced stage in older patients with co-morbidities. Their prognosis is generally poor with the benefits of standard therapies less certain. The pathogenesis of NAFLD-associated HCC is multifactorial and not well understood, although the risk of HCC developing undoubtedly increases as NAFLD progresses to steatohepatitis and cirrhosis. Recent advances in our understanding of the drivers of NAFLD and HCC will hopefully lead to the development of clinically relevant biomarkers, tools and strategies to aid the identification of high-risk patients, inform preventive measures, and introduction of better tolerated targeted therapies. Lifestyle modification and chemoprevention with drugs such as anti-platelets, statins and anti-diabetics are being evaluated for HCC prevention. The landmark IMBrave150 study introducing the combination of atezolizumab and bevacizumab has recently transformed the landscape of systemic therapies in HCC, with follow-up analyses and real-world data for patients with NAFLD-associated HCC eagerly anticipated. While responses may vary in ways not yet appreciated, the rate of discovery and progress suggests imminent change and opportunities.Entities:
Keywords: HCC; NAFLD; biomarkers; hepatocellular carcinoma; immunotherapy; liver cirrhosis; nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; prevention; systemic therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33854987 PMCID: PMC8041650 DOI: 10.2147/JHC.S272213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hepatocell Carcinoma ISSN: 2253-5969
Figure 1Recent progress in understanding the pathogenesis of NAFLD-associated HCC. Differential role of STAT1 and STAT3 signalling. Oxidative stress induces inactivation of TCPTP, which promotes STAT1 and STAT3 signalling. STAT1 signalling is responsible for T cell recruitment and progression to NASH and fibrosis, whereas STAT3 signalling is responsible for the development of HCC independent to NASH and fibrosis. Role of the altered microbiome. Cirrhotic patients with NAFLD-HCC have been found to have increased Bacteroides and Ruminococcaceae bacteria compared to patients with NAFLD cirrhosis without HCC. This profile is associated with high systemic levels of IL-8, IL-13, CCL3, CCL4, CCL5 and more activated monocytes in the circulation, which may be driving hepatic inflammation and subsequent HCC development. Role of IgA+ plasma cells. IgA+ plasma cells have been found to accumulate in NASH fibrosis and suppress CD8+ T cells via PD-L1 and IL-10 expression resulting in HCC development. Role of GPIbα platelet activation. Platelet activation and aggregation via GPIbα is elevated in NASH compared to steatosis and drives hepatic inflammation and HCC development via interaction with Kupffer cells and promotion of immune cell recruitment. Created with BioRender.com.
Figure 2Biomarkers of NAFLD progression and HCC development. NAFLD is a spectrum of liver disease ranging from steatosis to NASH, fibrosis and eventually cirrhosis. HCC mainly develops on the background of liver cirrhosis however between 25–50% of HCC develops in the absence of cirrhosis. Biomarkers of NAFLD and HCC risk. SNPs in PNPLA3, TM6SF2 and MBOAT7 genes are associated with both NAFLD progression and the development of NAFLD-HCC. TM6SF2 in particular is an independent risk factor for HCC development in the absence of cirrhosis. The predictive values of these SNPs are insufficient to be used in clinical practice on their own, however risk stratification tools may be developed using combinations of SNPs. Biomarkers of NAFLD progression. Biomarkers currently used in clinical practice to detect NAFLD fibrotic progression include; simple fibrosis scores such as the FIB4 score, panels using collagen biomarkers such as the ELF panel and imaging techniques such as FibroScan and MRE. Biomarkers currently under development include; PPARγ methylation of cell-free DNA, scoring systems using the PRO-C3 collagen neo-epitope (ADAPT and FIBC3) and circulating cell-free RNA. Biomarkers of HCC development. Current clinical guidelines recommend screening for HCC development with 6-monthly abdominal US with or without AFP measurements in patients with cirrhosis or advanced fibrosis. Biomarkers being developed to better detect HCC include; the GALAD score, measurement of serum ITIH4 and detection of cell-free RNA. Created with .
Interventions That May Prevent the Development of NAFLD-Associated HCC
| Intervention | Proposed Mechanism of Action | Studies |
|---|---|---|
| Exercise | Prevents NAFLD progression | Multinational prospective cohort study of 467,336 individuals showing a multivariable-adjusted hazards ratio for developing HCC of 0.55 for active compared to inactive individuals. |
| Modulation of proliferation and angiogenesis signalling pathways | ||
| Modulation of sirtuin activity | ||
| Diet | Prevents NAFLD progression | Case control study of 518 HCC cases and 772 controls demonstrating poor adherence to Mediterranean diet being associated with HCC risk. |
| Cholesterol driving HCC development through alterations in the gut microbiome | ||
| Metformin | Inhibits hepatocyte proliferation through cell cycle arrest | Case control study demonstrating 7% reduction in HCC risk per year of metformin treatment. |
| Meta-analysis of 19 studies involving 550,882 patients showing risk ratio reduction of 48% with metformin. | ||
| Statins | Modulation of proliferation and angiogenesis signalling pathways | Retrospective propensity score matched cohort study of 16,668 patients with viral hepatitis showing protective effect of lipophilic statins. |
| Aspirin | May prevent NAFLD progression | Retrospective propensity score matched cohort study of 50,275 patients with viral hepatitis demonstrating significantly reduced incidence of HCC and liver related mortality in patients on long term aspirin. |
| Effects on hepatic stellate cells, platelets, immune cell recruitment and cyclooxygenase 2 inhibition | Large meta-analysis of all previous observational studies finding aspirin was associated with reduced HCC risk. |
Abbreviations: NAFLD, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma.