| Literature DB >> 34823308 |
Jung Hwan Yu1, Soon Gu Cho2, Young-Joo Jin1, Jin-Woo Lee1.
Abstract
Chronic hepatitis B (CHB) seriously threatens human health. About 820,000 deaths annually are due to related complications such as hepatitis B and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Recently, the use of oral antiviral agents has significantly improved the prognosis of patients with CHB infection and reduced the risk of HCC. However, hepatitis B virus still remains a major factor in the development of HCC, raising many concerns. Therefore, numerous studies have been conducted to assess the risk of HCC in patients with CHB infection and many models have been proposed to predict the risk of developing HCC. However, as each study has different models for predicting HCC development that can be applied depending on the use of antiviral agents or the type of antiviral agents, it is necessary to properly understand characteristics of each model when using it for the evaluation of HCC in patients with CHB infection. In addition, because different variables such as host factor, viral activity, and cirrhosis are used to evaluate the risk of HCC development, it is necessary to assess the risk by carefully verifying which variables are used. Recently, studies have also evaluated the risk of HCC using risk prediction models through transient elastography and artificial intelligence (AI) system. These HCC risk predication models are also noteworthy. In this review, we aimed to compare HCC risk prediction models in patients with CHB infection reported to date to confirm variables used and specificity between each model to determine an appropriate HCC risk prediction method.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic hepatitis B; Hepatocellular carcinoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34823308 PMCID: PMC9293610 DOI: 10.3350/cmh.2021.0281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Mol Hepatol ISSN: 2287-2728
Figure 1.Variables used in the risk prediction models for HCC in untreated or NA-treated CHB patients. There are differences in the variables used in the HCC prediction model depending on whether or not antiviral drugs are taken. CHB, chronic hepatitis B; HBV, hepatitis B virus; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AFP, alpha-fetoprotein; NA, nucleos(t)ide analogues; γGT, gamma glutamyl transferase; COMP, cartilage oligomeric matrix protein; IL, interleukin; sPD1, serum programed death receptor 1; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma.
Figure 2.AUROCs value of HCC prediction models for CHB patients. This graph shows the AUROC value predicting 5-year HCC prediction in CHB patients. HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; CHB, chronic hepatitis B; NA, nucleos(t)ide analogues; AUROC, area under the receiver operating characteristic; LS, liver stiffness; LSM, LS measurement; LSPS, LSM-spleen diameter to platelet ratio score; RWS, real-world risk.
HCC risk models developed in untreated chronic hepatitis B patients
| HCC risk model | Country or area | Patients | Variables used in the HCC risk prediction | Number of variables | Reference | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Sex | HBV-DNA | Cirrhosis | LSM | Others | |||||
| GAG-HCC | Hong Kong | 820 | √ | √ | √ | √ | 4 | [ | ||
| CU-HCC | Hong Kong | 1,055 | √ | √ | √ | Albumin, bilirubin | 5 | [ | ||
| REACH-B | Asia | 3,584 | √ | √ | √ | HBeAg, ALT | 5 | [ | ||
| REACH-B II | Taiwan | 2,227 | √ | √ | √ | HBeAg, ALT, qHBsAg, genotype, family history | 8 | [ | ||
| LS model | Korea | 1,250 | √ | √ | √ | √ | 4 | [ | ||
| LSM-HCC | Hong Kong | 1,035 | √ | √ | √ | Albumin | 4 | [ | ||
| LSPS | Korea | 227 | √ | PLT, spleen size | 3 | [ | ||||
| RWS-HCC | Singapore | 583 | √ | √ | √ | AFP | 4 | [ | ||
| AGED | China | 628 | √ | √ | √ | HBeAg | 4 | [ | ||
| D2AD | Korea | 971 | √ | √ | √ | 3 | [ | |||
HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HBV, hepatitis B virus; LSM, liver stiffness measurement; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; qHBs Ag, quantitative HBs antigen; LS, liver stiffness; LSPS, LSM-spleen diameter to platelet ratio score; PLT, platelet; RWS, real-world risk; AFP, alpha-fetoprotein.
HCC risk models developed in chronic hepatitis B patients treated with antiviral agents
| HCC risk model | Country or area | Patients | Antiviral agent ETV/TDF/others | Variables used in the HCC risk prediction | Number of variables | Reference | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Sex | Cirrhosis | LSM | Others | ||||||
| PAGE-B | Europe | 1,325 | ETV or TDF | √ | √ | PLT | 3 | [ | ||
| mPAGE-B | Korea | 2,001 | ETV or TDF | √ | √ | Albumin, PLT | 4 | [ | ||
| PAGE-B-LS | Korea | 1,211 | 754/457/- | √ | √ | √ | PLT | 4 | [ | |
| mREACH-B | Korea | 192 | 192/-/- | √ | √ | √ | ALT | 4 | [ | |
| HCC-RESCUE | Korea | 990 | 990/-/- | √ | √ | √ | 3 | [ | ||
| APA-B | Taiwan | 883 | 883/-/- | √ | PLT | 3 | [ | |||
| CAMD | Asia | 23,851 | 22,971/880/- | √ | √ | √ | DM | 4 | [ | |
| AASL | Korea | 944 | 601/342/- | √ | √ | √ | Albumin | 4 | [ | |
| REAL-B | USA and Asia | 5,365 | 3,683/593/1,089 | √ | √ | √ | DM, PLT, AFP, alcohol use | 7 | [ | |
HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; ETV, entecavir; TDF, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate; LSM, liver stiffness measurement; PLT, platelet; DM, diabetes melltus; AFP, alpha-fetoprotein.
Calculation formula used in HCC risk prediction models
| Calculation formula | Risk group | Integer scoring system | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low | Intermediate | High | |||
| GAG-HCC | 14 × sex (male=1; female=0) + age (in years) + 3 × HBV DNA (log copies/mL) + 33 × cirrhosis (presence=1; absence=0) | <100 | ≥100 | No | |
| CU-HCC | Age (>50 years=3; ≤50 years=0) + albumin (≤35 g/L=20; >35 g/L=0) + bilirubin (>18 μmol/L=1.5; ≤18 μmol/L=0) + HBV DNA (<4 log copies/mL=0; 4–6 log copies/mL=1; >6 log copies/mL=4) + cirrhosis (yes=15; no=0) | <5 | 5–19 | >19 | Yes |
| REACH-B | Male sex: 2 points | ≤5 | 6–11 | 12–18 | Yes |
| Age: 1 point for every 5 years from 35 to 65 years of age (0–6 points) | |||||
| ALT (IU/L):15 to <45 (1 point), ≥45 (2 points) | |||||
| Positive HBeAg: 2 points | |||||
| HBV DNA (logcopies/mL): 104 to <105 (3 points), 105 to <106 (5 points), ≥106 (4 points) | |||||
| REACH-B II | Age: (each 5 years increment) 1 point | Yes | |||
| Male sex: 4 points | |||||
| ALT (IU/L): 15–44 (1 point), ≥45 (2 points) | |||||
| Positive HBeAg: genotype B or B+C (7 points), genotype C (10 points) | |||||
| HBV DNA (logcopies/mL)/HBsAg/genotype: <104/<100–999/any type (3 points), <104/≥1,000/any type (4 points), 104-6/<999/any type (5 points), <104-6/≥1,000/any type (7 points), ≥106/any level/B or B+C (7 points), ≥106/any level/C (13 points) | |||||
| Family history of HCC: presence (2 points) | |||||
| LS model | 0.05306 × age + 1.106 × male gender + 0.04858 × LS values + 0.50969 × HBV DNA (≥20,000 IU/L) | No | |||
| LSM-HCC | Age (>50 years=10; ≤50 years=0) + albumin (≤35 g/L=1; >35 g/L=0) + HBV DNA (>200,000 IU/mL=5; ≤200,000 IU/mL=0) + LS (≤8.0 kPa=0; <8.0–12.0 kPa=8; >12.0 kPa=14) | <11 | ≥11 | Yes | |
| LSPS | LS value (kPa) × spleen diameter (cm) / platelet count (×109/L) | <1.1 | >2.5 | No | |
| RWS-HCC | Male sex: 2 points | <4.5 | ≥4.5 | Yes | |
| Age: >55 years (1 point) | |||||
| Cirrhosis: presence (2.5 points) | |||||
| AFP: 4.1–20 (2 points), ≥20 (2.5 points) | |||||
| AGED | Age (years): 31–40 (1 point), 41–50 (2 points), 51–60 (3 points), >60 (2 points) | ≤4 | 5–9 | 10–12 | Yes |
| Male sex: 3 points | |||||
| HBeAg: positive (2 points) | |||||
| HBV DNA (logcopies/mL): <104 (0 point), 104-6 (4 points), >106 (3 points) | |||||
| D2AD | 2.9325 × log (HBV DNA IU/mL) − 0.10527 × [log (HBV DNA IU/mL)]2 + -1.27223 × (2 if female and 1 if male) + 0.07013 × age (years) | <2 | 2.0–2.4 | ≥2.5 | No |
| PAGE-B | Age (years): <30 (-4 points), 30–39 (-2 points), 40–49 (0 point), 50–59 (2 points), 60–69 (4 points), ≥70 (6 points) | ≤9 | 10–17 | ≥18 | Yes |
| Male sex: 5 points | |||||
| Platelets (mm3): ≥200×103 (0 point), 100×103 to <200×103 (6 points), <100×103 (11 points) | |||||
| mPAGE-B | Age (years); 30–39 (3 points), 40–49 (5 points), 50–59 (7 points), 60–69 (9 points), ≥70 (11 points) | ≤8 | 9–12 | ≥13 | Yes |
| Male sex: 2 points | |||||
| Platelets (×109/L): ≥250 (0 point), 200–250 (2 points), 150–200 (3 points), 100–150 (4 points), <100 (5 points) | |||||
| Albumin (g/L): <3 (3 points), 3–3.5 (2 points), 3.5–4 (1 point), ≥4 (0 point) | |||||
| PAGE-LS-B | 0.049 × age + 0.817 × male gender – 0.007 × platelet + 0.015 × LS value – 2.097 | <12 | 12–24 | ≥24 | No |
| HCC-RESCUE | Age + 15 × gender (female=0; male=1) + 23 × cirrhosis (absence=0; presence=1) | ≤64 | 65–84 | ≥85 | Yes |
| APA-B | Age (years): <40 (0 point), 40–49 (1 point), 50–59 (2 points), 60–69 (3 points), ≥70 (4 points) | ≤5 | 6–9 | ≥10 | Yes |
| Platelet count (×109/L): ≥130 (0 point), 100–129 (3 points), <100 (6 points) | |||||
| AFP: <5 (0 point), 5–9 (2 points), >9 (5 points) | |||||
| CAMD | Age (years): <40 (0 point), 40–49 (5 points), 50–59 (8 points), ≥60 (10 points) | <8 | 8–13 | ≥13 | Yes |
| Male sex: 2 points | |||||
| DM: presence (1 point) | |||||
| Cirrhosis with age <40 years (10 points), ≥40 years (6 points) | |||||
| AASL | Age (years): <30 (0 point), 30–39 (2 points), 40–49 (4 points), 50–59 (6 points), 60–69 (8 points), ≥70 (10 points) | ≤5 | 6–19 | ≥20 | Yes |
| Male sex: 3 points | |||||
| Albumin (g/L): <2.8 (5 points), 2.8–3.4 (3 points), ≥3.5 (0 point) | |||||
| Cirrhosis: presence (11 points) | |||||
| REAL-B | Male sex: 1 point | ≤3 | 4–7 | 8–13 | Yes |
| Age (years): 30–39 (1 point), 40–49 (2 points), 50–59 (3 points), 60–69 (4 points), 70–79 (5 points), ≥80 (6 points) | |||||
| Alcohol use: 1 point | |||||
| DM: 1 point | |||||
| Cirrhosis: 2 points | |||||
| Platelet count (×109/L): <150 (1 point) | |||||
| AFP: ≥10 (1 point) | |||||
HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HBV, hepatitis B virus; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; LS, liver stiffness; LSM, LS measurement; LSPS, LSM-spleen diameter to platelet ratio score; RWS, real-world risk; AFP, alpha-fetoprotein; DM, diabetes mellitus.
Figure 3.Suggestion for ideal HCC risk prediction model for CHB patients. CHB, chronic hepatitis B; AI, artificial intelligence; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma.