| Literature DB >> 34372524 |
Yashasavi Sachar1, Mayur Brahmania1,2, Renumathy Dhanasekaran3, Stephen E Congly4,5.
Abstract
Chronic hepatitis B (CHB) infection is a significant risk factor for developing hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). As HCC is associated with significant morbidity and mortality, screening patients with CHB at a high risk for HCC is recommended in an attempt to improve these outcomes. However, the screening recommendations on who to screen and how often are not uniform. Identifying patients at the highest risk of HCC would allow for the best use of health resources. In this review, we evaluate the literature on screening patients with CHB for HCC, strategies for optimizing adherence to screening, and potential risk stratification tools to identify patients with CHB at a high risk of developing HCC.Entities:
Keywords: adherence; alpha-fetoprotein; cost-effectiveness; hepatitis B; hepatocellular carcinoma; risk stratification; screening; ultrasound
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34372524 PMCID: PMC8310362 DOI: 10.3390/v13071318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Summary of International HCC Screening Recommendations.
| 1 | APASL 2017 | AASLD 2018 | CASL 2019 | EASL 2018 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screening Strategy | ||||
| Abdominal ultrasound (US) | Recommended every 6 months | |||
| Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) | Recommend AFP every 6 months with US | Can consider AFP every 6 months with US | AFP use not recommended | |
|
| ||||
| Patients with cirrhosis | Yes | Child Pugh A/B | Yes | Child Pugh A/B |
| Asian men with chronic hepatitis B | >40 years old | PAGE-B ≥ 10 | ||
| Asian women with chronic hepatitis B | >50 years old | |||
| African men/women with chronic hepatitis B | >20 | >40 | >20 | |
| Family history of hepatocellular carcinoma | Yes | Yes | Yes, >40 years old | No |
| Co-infected with hepatitis delta virus (HDV) | No | Yes | No | No |
| Co-infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) | No | No | >40 years old | No |
1 APASL: Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver; AASLD: American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases; EASL: European Association for the Study of the Liver; CASL: Canadian Association for the Study of the Liver; PAGE-B: platelets, age, gender-HBV score.
Figure 1Factors Associated with Decreased Adherence to HCC Screening [37,59,65,66].
Critical Analysis of Untreated Patient Risk Assessment Models.
| Name 1 | Components | Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|
| IPM [ | Cirrhosis |
Variety of initial health statuses (diagnosed cirrhosis, CHB, carrier) Prospective study External validation in South Korea |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Heavy alcohol use inconsistent variable Limited antiviral available |
| CU-HCC [ | Age |
Treatment status heterogeneity External validation [ Higher AUROC than REACH-B, NGM1-HCC, NGM2-HCC and GAG-HCC in North American population [ |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Did not discuss how missing data handled [ |
| LSM-HCC [ | Age |
Further refined CU-HCC model Treatment status heterogeneity TE LSM more accurate than U/S [ Two-tier model risk stratification |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Did not discuss how missing data handled [ |
| GAG-HCC [ | Version 1: |
Continuous nature of some variables 10-year NPV approaching 100% in cross validation [ Two-tier model for risk stratification |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Same cohort for training and validation |
| REACH-B [ | Gender |
Derived in Taiwan and applied to Hong Kong and South Korea Large development cohort (n = 3584) Used in APASL 2012 guidelines for anti-viral treatment eligibility [ Easy to evaluate and objective |
Limited discrimination in Caucasian population [ Not a validated predictor of anti-viral treatment eligibility in patients >40 Three-tier stratification strategy Developed in non-cirrhotic cohort Only overt cirrhosis considered in exclusion criteria [ |
| aMAP score [ | Age |
Generated, calibrated, and assessed in multiple ethnicities Large derivation (3688) and validation (13,324) cohorts Consistent performance with multiple etiologies/ethnicities Continuous variables Easy to evaluate and objective Performed better than PAGE-B, LSM-HCC, REACH-B, CU-HCC, mREACH-B, mPAGE-B |
Platelet count as an indication of fibrosis [ PPV and specificity lower in external validation [ Three-tier stratification strategy Intention to score for both HCV and HBV may limit HBV optimization |
| RWS-HCC [ | Sex |
Minimal calculation required Treatment status heterogeneity Multiple Asian cohorts validation Two-tier risk assessment strategy |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Did not describe diagnosis of cirrhosis Only patients with overt cirrhosis |
| NGM1-HCC [ | Gender |
Nomogram customizable for individual risk characteristics Large HCC cohort (n = 3653) Intuitive clinical decision tree |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Alcohol consumption refers to frequency not volume of alcohol |
| NGM2-HCC [ | Gender |
Nomogram customizable for individual risk characteristics Large HCC cohort (n = 3653) Intuitive clinical decision tree |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Alcohol consumption refers to frequency not volume of alcohol |
| LSPS [ |
|
Potential multi-outcome predictor with precedence in esophageal varices, hepatic decompensation [ Population with heterogenous treatment status |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Self-reported alcohol consumption was exclusion criteria Three-tier stratification strategy Intended for use as a marker |
| AGED [ | Age |
Utility for non-cirrhotic CHB patient Exclusively objective variables |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Three-tier stratification system Only overt cirrhosis was considered |
| D2AS Risk score [ | HBV DNA |
Evaluated multiple clinical indicators of cirrhosis Continuous variables used Common and objective variables |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Minimal HBV genotype diversity Did not evaluate well-known HCC risk factors, i.e., alcohol consumption |
1 IPM: individual prediction model; CU-HCC: Chinese University HCC score; LSM-HCC: liver stiffness measurement-HCC; GAG-HCC: guide with age, gender, HBV DNA, core promoter mutations and cirrhosis; REACH-B: risk estimation for hepatocellular carcinoma in chronic hepatitis B; aMAP score: age, male, albumin-bilirubin, platelets; RWS-HCC: real world risk score for hepatocellular carcinoma; NGM1-HCC: nomogram 1 for HCC risk; NGM2-HCC: nomogram 2 for HCC Risk; LSPS: LS value-spleen diameter to platelet ratio score; AGED: age, gender, HBeAg and HBV DNA levels; D2AS: DNA2, age, sex.
Critical Analysis of Treated Patient Risk Assessment Models.
| Name 1 | Components | Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|
| PAGE-B [ | Age |
Validated in Asian populations [ Higher AUROC than REACH-B in Asian CHB patients [ Multiple categories for each variable Common and objective variables |
Created using Caucasian dataset Three-tier stratification system Poorer AUROC than aMAP [ Development cohort exclusively patients receiving antiviral therapy |
| mREACH-B [ | Gender |
TE LSM more accurate than U/S [ Use of LSM values more likely to be accurate for treated patients Validated in treatment heterogenous cohort [ |
Retained majority of issues from REACH-B |
| AASL-HCC [ | Age |
Comprehensive cirrhosis diagnosis Higher accuracy for predicting 10-year risk of developing HCC than CU-HCC, GAG-HCC, REACH-B, Page-B |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Three-tier stratification strategy Homogenous HBV-C dominant genotype cohort |
| CAMD [ | Cirrhosis |
Higher 5-year AUROC than mPAGE-B, PAGE-B in Korean population [ Different national cohorts for development and validation Comprehensive cirrhosis diagnosis |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Three-tier stratification strategy Limited to clinically diabetic patients No evidence for support in populations with high diabetes prevalence, i.e., South Asian |
| REAL-B [ | Sex |
Study population included 8 different Asian ethnicities One of the largest cohorts (n= 5356) When compared to CAMD, had a better predictive value up to 10 years Consistently capable in population with varying treatment type In external validation, had greater discriminative performance than REACH-B, CU-HCC, GAG-HCC, PAGE-B and mPAGE-B [ |
Limited to clinically diabetic patients Limited to overt cirrhosis Lack of explanation regarding quantity of “significant alcohol use” Did not evaluate role of ethnicity or HBV genotype in accuracy |
| HCC-RESCUE [ | Age |
Validated in Caucasian population using multiple antiviral therapies [ |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Three-tier stratification strategy Limited to ultrasound for cirrhosis diagnosis |
| APA-B [ | Age |
Cohort with heterogenic cirrhosis profile Confirmed and advised patients to avoid using herbal therapies concurrently Easy to evaluate and objective |
Ethnically homogenous cohort Three-tier stratification strategy Did not account for impact of other variables on utility of platelet count as surrogate for cirrhosis |
1 PAGE-B: platelets, age, gender-HBV score; mREACH-B: modified REACH-B; AASL-HCC: age, albumin, sex, liver cirrhosis)-HCC score; CAMD: cirrhosis, age, male sex, and diabetes mellitus score; REAL-B: real-world effectiveness from the Asia Pacific rim liver consortium for HBV; HCC-RESCUE: HCC-risk estimating score in CHB patients under entecavir; APA-B: age, platelet counts, and alpha-fetoprotein.