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1.
Orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) is increasingly being applied for cure in patients with cirrhosis and concomitant hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In recipients with limited tumor burden, OLT achieves reasonable long-term outcome. This study sought to identify clinical and pathologic variables predictive of long-term disease-free survival and the presence of vascular invasion. From 1992 to 2006, 130 patients underwent OLT for cirrhosis and HCC. Malignancy was diagnosed in 107 patients prior to OLT and in 23 patients on pathologic examination of the explant. Nine clinical and pathologic variables were considered including: TNM stage, nodularity, vascular invasion, Milan criteria, incidental lesion, differentiation, tumor size, preOLT transarterial chemoembolization (TACE), and administration of sirolimus-based immunosuppression. The overall incidence of HCC recurrence was 17% with the majority (82%) being stage III. Cumulatively, tumor recurrence-free survival (RFS) is 84, 74, and 67% at 1, 3, and 5 years respectively. Independent predictors of RFS included stage III and poorly differentiated lesions (P<0.05). Furthermore, stage III tumors and those >3.5 cm in size were predictive of vascular invasion. Importantly, preOLT, TACE and postOLT sirolimus had no influence on survival. Pathologic variables including tumor stage and grade have a significant impact on outcome. Importantly, it seems that TACE and sirolimus had no beneficial effect.  相似文献   

2.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Liver transplantation (OLT) for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) improves patient survival when tumor size and number are limited according to the Milan criteria. However, the impact of tumor size vs. the number of lesions for tumor recurrence after OLT is unclear. Microvascular invasion appears to be a significant risk factor for tumor recurrence. Therefore, it was the aim of this study to investigate tumor differentiation and microvascular invasion in relation to tumor number and size and their impact on survival after transplantation. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In 97 adult HCC patients who underwent OLT between June 1985 and December 2005 the incidence of microvascular invasion, tumor differentiation, and the number and size of tumor lesions were analyzed retrospectively. Their impact on survival was studied by multivariate analysis. RESULTS: Microvascular invasion was the only independent negative predictor of survival after OLT for HCC (p = 0.025). Tumor size > 5 cm was predictive for microvascular invasion (p = 0.007). In contrast, tumor number did not affect the incidence of microvascular invasion or cumulative survival. CONCLUSION: The size of the largest HCC lesion, but not the number of tumors, determined microvascular invasion, a predictor of the outcome following OLT for HCC. Thus, the number of HCC lesions should not be applied to patient selection prior to OLT. These data support the extension of the Milan criteria for the selection of HCC patients for OLT with regard to tumor number, but not tumor size.  相似文献   

3.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth most common cancer in the world and the third leading cause of cancer-related death. In this study, we sought to assess the outcome of patients with HCC who underwent orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) in a center in the northeast of Brazil. Between May 2002 and July 2008, 294 OLTs were performed at our center. In 45 patients, HCC was confirmed by histological examination of the explant. Patients were predominantly men of ages ranging from 14–67 years. Hepatitis C virus was involved in 55.4% of the cases. Alpha fetoprotein (AFP) levels were normal in 65.2% of the patients and surpassed 100 ng/mL in only 10.4%. The median waiting time on the list was 10 months. Seventeen patients (37.7%) presented a solitary nodule, 19 (42.2%) had 2 or 3 nodules, and 9 patients (20%) had more than 3 nodules. The maximal diameter of the largest tumor was <3 cm in 26 patients (57.7%) and exceeded 5 cm in 6 patients (13.3%). Ten tumors were well differentiated, 32 were moderately differentiated, and 3 were poorly differentiated. Eleven tumors showed microvascular invasion. There have been 4 tumor recurrences. There was an association between microvascular invasion and tumor recurrence with a statistically significant relative risk. In conclusion, OLT is an excellent option for patients with HCC. The recurrence rate was low (<10%). However, we believe that more prospective studies are needed about OLT beyond the Milan criteria because our study suggested that microvascular invasion may be more important than tumor size or number.  相似文献   

4.
Vascular invasion and high histologic grade predict poor outcome after surgical resection or liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Despite the known association between tumor size and vascular invasion, a proportion of patients with large tumors can be treated surgically with excellent outcomes. Clarification of the association between tumor size, histologic grade, and vascular invasion has implications for patient selection for resection and transplantation. The objective of this study was to examine the relationship between HCC tumor size and microscopic (occult) vascular invasion and histologic grade in a multicenter international database of 1,073 patients who underwent resection of HCC. The incidence of microscopic vascular invasion increased with tumor size (< or =3 cm, 25%; 3.1-5 cm, 40%; 5.1-6.5 cm, 55%; >6.5 cm, 63%) (P < 0.005). Both size and number of tumors were important factors predicting vascular invasion. Among all patients with tumors 5.1 to 6.5 cm, microscopic vascular invasion was present in 55% compared with 31% for all patients with tumors 5 cm or smaller (P < 0.001). Among patients with solitary tumors only, microscopic vascular invasion was significantly more common in tumors measuring 5.1 to 6.5 cm (41%) compared with 27% of tumors 5 cm or smaller (P < 0.003). Tumor size also predicted histologic grade: 36% of tumors 5 cm or smaller were high grade, compared with 54% of lesions 5.1 to 6.5 cm (P = 0.01). High histologic grade, an alpha-fetoprotein level of at least 1000 ng/mL, and multiple tumor nodules each predicted occult vascular invasion in tumors larger than 5 cm. The high incidence of occult vascular invasion and advanced histologic grade in HCC tumors larger than 5 cm, as well as biologic predictors of poor prognosis, should be considered before criteria for transplantation are expanded to include these patients.  相似文献   

5.
Microscopic tumor cell dissemination may be a more important factor in the recurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) after liver transplantation, probably because of posttransplant immunosuppression. The presence of microvascular tumor embolism was undetermined as a factor for HCC recurrence after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). This study evaluated whether microvascular tumor embolism affects recurrence-free survival and correlates with other clinicopathologic factors after OLT among patients with HCC. From September 1996 to June 2003, 72 OLTs for HCC were enrolled in this study. Median follow-up was 22.8 months. Among 41 patients without microvascular tumor embolism, 1-year, 2-year, and 5-year recurrence-free survival rates were all 97.6%, while these rates were 77.3%, 68.2%, and 59.7%, respectively, for 31 patients (43.1%) with microvascular tumor embolism (P = .0006). The 5-year recurrence-free survival rate showed significant differences for a pT2 tumor (P = .0073), for maximal tumor size <3 cm (P = .0328), for > or =5 cm solitary tumor (P = .0095), and for the presence of a tumor capsule (P = .0012), within the Milan criteria (P = .0376). At multivariate analysis, significant independent predictors for HCC recurrence were microvascular tumor embolism and histopathologic grade. In conclusion, microvascular tumor embolism is an independent predictor of HCC recurrence after liver transplantation. Although OLT is a safe and effective treatment for HCC within the Milan criteria, the presence of microvascular tumor embolism at pathologic examination can predict its recurrence. In these cases, the feasibility of immunosuppressive therapy or adjuvant chemotherapy must be considered to prevent tumor recurrence.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND: Patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) who undergo liver resection and transplantation are predicted to have a poor outcome if the disease is associated with vascular invasion. This study aimed to identify preoperative predictors of microvascular invasion in patients with HCCs larger than 5 cm. METHODS: From May 1992 to October 2005, 231 patients underwent curative hepatic resection for HCC. Of these, 96 patients had HCCs larger than 5 cm. Analysis was limited to patients without macroscopic vascular invasion (n = 65). RESULTS: Multivariate analysis showed that patients with tumors larger than 7 cm and type 2 (single nodular type with extranodular growth) and type 3 (contiguous multinodular type formed by a cluster of small and contiguous nodules) tumors had an increased risk of microscopic vascular invasion. The overall incidence of microscopic vascular invasion was 46.2% (n = 30), but only 12.5% (2/16) in patients with type 1 tumors (single nodular type that is approximately round with a clear demarcation) measuring less than 7 cm. CONCLUSION: Larger tumors (>7 cm) and type 2 and type 3 tumors are strong predictors of microvascular invasion in patients with HCCs larger than 5 cm.  相似文献   

7.

Introduction

Orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) is a well-established treatment for cirrhotic patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) who meet the Milan criteria. The aim of this study was to identify predictors of survival among 65 patients with HCC in cirrhotic livers who underwent liver transplantation (OLT).

Methods

From January 2001 to December 2008, we performed 655 OLT in 615 patients. HCC was diagnosed in 58 patients before OLT and in 65 by histological examination of the explanted livers; 74% of the patients met Milan criteria by histological examination.

Results

The median follow-up was 27 months (range = 1-96). We analyzed patient age and gender, etiology of liver disease, Child score at transplantation, rejection episodes, tumor number/size, vascular invasion, and differentiation grade. There was no significant difference in survival among patients grouped according to the Model for End-stage Liver Disease staging system for HCC. The 5-year survival of patients with low differentiated (G3) HCC was significantly worse than that of those with moderately differentiated (G2) or well-differentiated (G1) HCC: 50%, 81%, and 86% respectively, (P < .01). Patients with microvascular invasion displayed a worse 5-year survival than those without vascular invasion (42% vs 80%; P < .01).

Conclusions

The analysis indicated that the histological grade of the tumors and evidences of microscopic vascular invasion were the most useful predictive factors for overall survival among patients with cirrhosis after liver transplantation for HCC.  相似文献   

8.

Background

Solitary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a good candidate for surgical resection. However, the significance of the size of the tumor in solitary HCC remains unclear.

Objective

The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of tumor size on overall and recurrence-free survival of patients with solitary HCC.

Materials

We retrospectively reviewed 616 patients with histologically confirmed solitary HCC who underwent curative surgical resection between 1994 and 2010. The characteristics and prognosis of patients with HCC were analyzed stratified by tumor size.

Results

A total of 403 patients (65 %) had tumors <5 cm, 172 (28 %) had tumors between 5 and 10 cm, and 41 (7 %) had tumors >10 cm. The incidence of microvascular invasion, satellite nodules, and advanced tumor grade significantly increased with tumor size. The 5-year overall and recurrence-free survival rates of HCC <5 cm were 69.6 % and 32 %, respectively, which were significantly better than those of HCC between 5 and 10 cm (58 % and 26 %, respectively) and HCC >10 cm (53 % and 24 %, respectively). On multivariate analysis, cirrhosis (p = 0.0307), Child–Pugh B (p = 0.0159), indocyanine green retention rate at 15 min >10 % (p = 0.0071), microvascular invasion (p < 0.0001), and satellite nodules (p = 0.0009) were independent predictors of poor survival, whereas tumor size >5 cm was not.

Conclusion

Although recurrence rates are high, surgical resection for solitary HCC offers good overall survival. Tumor size was not a prognostic factor. Solitary large HCC >10 cm would be a good candidate for hepatectomy as well as solitary HCC between 5 and 10 cm.  相似文献   

9.
HYPOTHESIS: Histological grade of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an important prognostic factor affecting patient survival after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). DESIGN: Retrospective analysis. SETTING: University-based teaching hospital. PATIENTS: Of 952 OLTs performed between June 1991 and January 1999, 56 OLT recipients had histologically proven HCC in the explant liver. Of those, 53 patients with complete clinicopathologic data were analyzed. A single pathologist blinded to the outcome of each patient reviewed all histological specimens. RESULTS: Median follow-up was 709 days. Overall survival for patients with tumors sized 5 cm or less at 1, 3, and 5 years was 87%, 78%, and 71%, respectively (Kaplan-Meier). Univariate analysis revealed the size, number, and distribution of tumors; the presence of microscopic vascular invasion and lymph node metastasis; histological differentiation; and pTNM stage to be statistically significant factors affecting survival. Multivariate analysis revealed histological differentiation and pTNM stage to be the independent and statistically significant factors affecting survival (P =.002 and.03, respectively). When pTNM stage was excluded from multivariate analysis, histological differentiation and size remained the significant independent factors (P =.02 and.03, respectively). Three-year survival for patients with small (5 cm) tumor with well- to moderately differentiated and poorly differentiated HCC was 62.5% and 0%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: In our retrospective experience, histological differentiation had a statistically significant effect on the prognosis of HCC after OLT. However, before altering the current OLT selection criteria for patients with HCC, prospective studies are required to confirm the impact of histological grade on clinical outcome.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: Surgical resection has been the treatment of choice for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), but the resection rate remains low in cirrhotic patients and recurrence is common. Unfavorable results compared with benign disease and the shortage of organ donors have led to a restricted indication for orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) for HCC. STUDY DESIGN: The aim of this study was to analyze the results of our surgical approach to HCC in patients with cirrhosis. The first treatment strategy indicated in these patients was OLT. From January 1990 to May 1999, 85 patients underwent OLT and the remaining 35 had surgical resection. RESULTS: One-, 3-, and 5-year survival rates were 84%, 74%, and 60% versus 83%, 57%, and 51%, respectively, in the OLT and resection groups (p = 0.34). Hepatic tumor recurrence was much less frequent in the OLT group than in the resection group. The 1-, 3-, and 5-year disease-free survival rates were 83%, 72%, and 60% versus 70%, 44%, and 31%, respectively (p = 0.027). In the multivariate Cox regression analysis, macroscopic vascular invasion was the only factor independently associated with death or recurrence after OLT (p = 0.006). After partial liver resection, the tumors significantly associated with mortality and recurrence in the multivariate analysis were solitary or multiple tumors greater than 2cm with microscopic vascular invasion (pathologic pT3) (p = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Our results confirm that in cirrhotic patients, OLT may provide better outcomes than liver resection in carefully selected HCC and that longterm survival is similar to the results of OLT in cirrhotic patients without tumors.  相似文献   

11.
Appropriate patient selection is crucial in ensuring acceptable outcomes from orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) has elected to prioritize HCC patients for OLT based on criteria of tumor burden. However, it is unclear whether these criteria correlate with outcome, or with the pathobiological features associated with tumor recurrence. Therefore, we analyzed 109 consecutive patients undergoing OLT for HCC at our center, to determine the utility of present selection criteria in predicting outcome. Pathologic tumor staging of the explanted liver was based on the American Tumor Study Group modified tumor node metastases (pTNM) classification system. Multifocality was defined as >4 tumor nodules on explant. Survival analysis was performed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazards regression methods. At a median follow-up of 18.9 months, the overall mortality was 19% with 15 patients (14%) dying of recurrent HCC. Kaplan-Meier 1, 3 and 5-year survival rates were 89.5%, 68%, and 65%, respectively. Recurrence-free rates of 1, 3, and 5 years were 89%, 75%, and 65%, respectively. On univariate analysis, the factors found to be significantly associated with recurrence of HCC were explant features of macrovascular invasion, tumor size (per centimeter increase), pTNM stage (per 1-stage increase), and pre-transplant serum alphafetoprotein (AFP) >300 ng/mL. In defining a threshold level, we found that explant tumor diameter > or =3 cm, and those tumors classified as at least pT3 on pathological examination, were significantly associated with recurrence (P =.01 and.03, respectively). Tumor size on explant was found to be strongly correlated with multifocality (P =.017) and vascular invasion (P =.02). Patients exceeding pathological UNOS criteria were 3.1 times more likely to have recurrence of HCC (P =.03). In conclusion, we found that tumor size appears to be a surrogate marker for negative pathobiological predictors of outcome, i.e., vascular invasion and multifocality. Present UNOS selection criteria for HCC based on tumor burden appear to provide adequate discriminatory power in predicting outcome of OLT.  相似文献   

12.
《Liver transplantation》2002,8(9):765-774
We previously proposed modified staging criteria for predicting acceptable outcome after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). These were solitary tumor ≤6.5 cm, or three or fewer nodules with the largest lesion ≤4.5 cm and total tumor diameter ≤8 cm, without gross vascular invasion (University of California, San Francisco [UCSF] criteria). In this study, we further evaluated the performance of the Milan criteria (solitary tumor ≤5 cm, or three or fewer lesions none >3 cm), the UCSF criteria, and the Pittsburgh modified tumor-node-metastasis (TNM) criteria. Pathologic HCC staging according to each set of criteria was performed in 70 patients. The difference in survival when comparing 24 patients with HCC exceeding Milan criteria versus 46 patients meeting Milan criteria did not reach statistical significance (HR, 2.0; P = .12). Using our definition for acceptable 2-year survival to be ≥70%, the 14 patients (20%) meeting UCSF criteria but exceeding Milan criteria had a 2-year survival of 86% (95% CI, 54% to 96%). Survival for Pittsburgh stage I, II, and IIIA patients as a group was significantly better than for stages IIIB and IVA patients combined (HR, 4.2; P = .007), and similar to survival for patients meeting UCSF criteria. Advanced tumor exceeding UCSF criteria served reasonably well as a surrogate marker for poorly differentiated grade and microvascular invasion. In conclusion, our analyses suggest that UCSF criteria better predict acceptable posttransplant outcome than Milan criteria. UCSF criteria confer a different advantage over Pittsburgh criteria, which require information on microvascular invasion that is difficult to ascertain preoperatively without the attendant risk of biopsy. (Liver Transpl 2002;8:765-774.)  相似文献   

13.
Introduction  Axillary nodal status is one of the most important prognostic factors in breast cancer. In the present study we used it to determine the predictors of axillary lymph node metastases in breast cancer and to determine if there is a group of patients in whom minimal axillary surgery is indicated. Methods  This article reports a retrospective study of 953 patients with T1 and T2 invasive breast carcinomas seen in the University Malaya Medical Centre between January 2001 and December 2005, where axillary dissection was done. Results  Of the 953 patients, 283 (29.7%) had breast-conserving surgery, and the rest had mastectomies. In this series, 463 patients (48.6%) were younger than 50 years of age; 365 patients (38.3%) had lymph node involvement. The Malays tend to have more axillary node metastases (45.1%) than the Chinese (36.9%); however, there was no significant relationship between age and race and lymph node involvement. Some 23.9% of grade 1 cancers were node positive, compared to 42.9% of grade 2/3 cancers. Tumor size ranged from 0.2 cm to 5 cm; 55.5% of tumors were T2 (>2–5 cm). There were only 13 (1.4%) T1a tumors (>0.1–0.5 cm). Node involvement was documented in 7.7% of T1a tumors, 12.3% of T1b tumors (>0.5–1 cm), 29.2% of T1c tumors, and 48.2% of T2 tumors. In patients who had no lymphovascular invasion (LVI), 24.4% had axillary node metastases, compared with 52.2% of patients where LVI was reported. On univariate analysis, our study found that tumor diameter >2 cm, presence of lymphovascular invasion, and higher tumor grade (2 & 3) were factors significantly associated with a higher risk of nodal metastases. On multivariate analysis, however, only lymphovascular invasion and tumor size were independent predictors based on the logistic regression. Conclusions  In T1 tumors, axillary lymph node dissection will overtreat almost 75% of cases; therefore a sentinel lymph node biopsy is justified in these tumors. Sentinel lymph node biopsy has been shown to reduce the complications of formal axillary dissection, such as shoulder stiffness, pain, and lymphedema. In patients with T2 tumors, where almost 45% have lymph node involvement, sentinel node biopsy may not be cost effective.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) competes with benign liver disease as indication for liver transplantation (OLT). The aim of this study was to determine long-term results of OLT for HCC. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed the prognostic role of HCC diagnosis at pathological exam in adult OLT. In the HCC group, we evaluated the prognostic role of the time of diagnosis (incidental versus nonincidental) and of pathological tumor TNM staging. The primary endpoint was 1-, 3-, and 10-year patient survivals. RESULTS: From 1991 to 2006, among 550 adults who underwent first OLT, HCC was found in 120 patients at pathological exam. In 26 cases (22%), the diagnosis of HCC was incidental. There were 59 cases (49%) of pathological T1 to T2 tumor (one nodule < 5 cm, or two to three nodules < 3 cm, without metastases and/or vascular invasion), and 61 cases (51%) of pathologic T3-T4a tumor. HCC diagnosis did not show a significant prognostic impact by Cox survival analysis. After a median follow-up of 31 months, 1-, 5-, and 10-year survivals were 91%, 81%, and 73% in the HCC group, and 84%, 76%, and 67% in the non-HCC group. Time of HCC diagnosis (incidental versus nonincidental) and pathological TNM staging (T1 to T2 vs T3 to T4a) did not result significant survival predictors upon Cox analysis. CONCLUSION: In our experience, the long-term results of OLT for HCC overlapped those of OLT for benign disease, although 51% of tumors were T3 to T4a at pathological exam.  相似文献   

15.
Background We evaluated the long-term survival results and safety of percutaneous radiofrequency ablation (RFA) for recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) after hepatectomy, and assessed the prognostic factors that can influence its long-term therapeutic results. Methods One hundred and two patients, who had 119 recurrent HCC in their livers, underwent ultrasound-guided percutaneous RFA. All the patients had a history of hepatic resection as a first-line treatment modality for HCC. The mean diameter of the recurrent tumors was 2.0 cm (range, 0.8–5.0 cm). We evaluated the effectiveness rates, local tumor progression rates, survival rates, and complications. We also assessed the prognostic factors of the survival rates by using Cox proportional hazard models. Results The primary effectiveness rate was 93.3% (111 of 119). The cumulative rates of local tumor progression at 1, 3, and 5 years were 6.0, 8.6, and 11.9%, respectively. The cumulative survival rates at 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 years were 93.9, 83.7, 65.7, 56.6, and 51.6%, respectively. Patients with a lower serum α-fetoprotein (AFP) level (≤100 μg/L) before RFA or with small resected tumors (≤5 cm) demonstrated better survival results (P < .05). There was only one major complication (liver abscess, 1.0% per treatment) during the follow-up period. There were no procedure-related deaths. Conclusions Percutaneous RFA is an effective and safe treatment modality for intrahepatic recurrent HCC after hepatectomy. Serum AFP level before RFA and resected tumor size were significant prognostic predictors of long-term survival.  相似文献   

16.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and the impact of current staging criteria on long term survival. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: HCC is becoming an increasingly common indication for OLT. Medicare approves OLT only for HCCs meeting the Milan criteria, thus limiting OLT for an expanding pool of potential liver recipients. We analyzed our experience with OLT for HCC to determine if expansion of criteria for OLT for HCC is warranted. METHODS:: All patients undergoing OLT for HCC from 1984 to 2006 were evaluated. Outcomes were compared for patients who met Milan criteria (single tumor < opr =5 cm, maximum of 3 total tumors with none >3 cm), University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) criteria (single tumor <6.5 cm, maximum of 3 total tumors with none >4.5 cm, and cumulative tumor size <8 cm), or exceeded UCSF criteria. RESULTS: A total of 467 transplants were performed for HCC. At mean follow up of 6.6 +/- 0.9 years, recurrence rate was 21.2%, and overall 1, 3, and 5-year survival was 82%, 65%, and 52%, respectively. Patients meeting Milan criteria had similar 5-year post-transplant survival to patients meeting UCSF criteria by preoperative imaging (79% vs. 64%; P = 0.061) and explant pathology (86% vs. 71%; P = 0.057). Survival for patients with tumors beyond UCSF criteria was significantly lower and was below 50% at 5 years. Multivariate analysis showed that tumor number (P < 0.001), lymphovascular invasion (P < 0.001), and poor differentiation (P = 0.002) independently predicted poor survival. CONCLUSIONS: This largest single institution experience with OLT for HCC demonstrates prolonged survival after liver transplantation for tumors beyond Milan criteria but within UCSF criteria, both when classified by preoperative imaging and by explant pathology. Measured expansion of OLT criteria is justified for tumors not exceeding the UCSF criteria.  相似文献   

17.
No prior studies have shown that pre-operative loco-regional therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) improves survival following orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). We performed subgroup analyses according to pathologic HCC stage among 168 patients who underwent OLT to test the hypothesis that pre-operative loco-regional therapy confers a survival advantage in a subgroup at intermediate risk for HCC recurrence. Patients with pathologic T3 HCC meeting the proposed UCSF expanded criteria (single lesion not exceeding 6.5 cm or two to three lesions none > 4.5 cm with total tumor diameter within 8 cm) had a similar 5-year recurrence-free survival as patients with pathologic T2 HCC (88.5% vs. 93.8%; p = 0.56). In the subgroup with pathologic T2 or T3 HCC, the 5-year recurrence-free survival was 93.8% for the 85 patients who received pre-operative loco-regional therapy, versus 80.6% for the other 41 patients without treatment (p = 0.049). The treatment benefit, according to 5-year recurrence-free survival, appeared greater for pathologic T3 (85.9% vs. 51.4%; p = 0.05) than T2 HCC (96.4% versus 87.1%; p = 0.12). In conclusion, although the lack of a randomized controlled design precludes drawing firm conclusions, our results suggest that pre-operative loco-regional therapy may confer a survival benefit after OLT in the subgroup with pathologic T2 and T3 HCC.  相似文献   

18.
肝癌临床病理因素与肝移植术后肿瘤复发的关系   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
目的探讨原发性肝细胞型肝癌患者行原位肝移植后肝癌复发或转移的影响因素。方法回顾性分析31例肝细胞型肝癌患者肝移植的临床资料,探讨临床病理因素与术后肿瘤复发或转移及无瘤存活率的关系。结果31例患者术后随访时间为12~24个月,中位随访时间为15个月,6个月、12个月及18个月的无瘤存活率分别为83.87%、74.19%及59.49%。Child-Pugh分级、肿瘤的数目、病理Edmondson分级对肿瘤的复发或转移无影响;肿瘤的大小、TNM分期、有无脉管浸润、是否符合Milan标准对肿瘤的复发或转移有显著影响;肿瘤有无脉管浸润以及TNM分期对患者的无瘤存活率有显著影响。结论肿瘤的大小、TNM分期、有无脉管浸润、是否符合Milan标准均能反映肿瘤复发的风险,而肿瘤的TNM分期及肿瘤有无脉管浸润能进一步影响患者术后的无瘤存活率。  相似文献   

19.
目的分析影响肝癌肝移植术后生存率和无瘤生存率的危险因素,探讨国内肝移植治疗肝癌的选择标准。方法对67例接受同种异位原位肝移植治疗的原发性肝癌病人的基本资料和肿瘤相关资料包括术前病情分级、血清AFP水平、术前辅助治疗以及肝癌大小、数目、pTNM分期、肿瘤恶性程度分级等因素进行单因素和多因素分析。结果术后1年、2年累积生存率为77%、67%,6个月和12个月无瘤生存率为66%和58%。单因素分析显示对肝癌肝移植术后累积生存率影响有统计学意义的因素为CHILD分级(MELD积分)和肝外大血管侵犯;多因素分析影响肝癌肝移植术后无瘤生存率有统计学义的因素是肿瘤大小、大血管侵犯和肿瘤分化程度。结论影响肝癌肝移植术后生存率的因素仍是术前患者肝功能状态。对存在大血管侵犯的肝癌患者需严格控制肝移植术适应证,而无血管侵犯的患者在选择肝移植治疗时肿瘤大小指标可较米兰标准适当放宽。  相似文献   

20.
OBJECTIVE: Determine the histologic response-rate (complete versus partial tumor extinction) after single radiofrequency ablation (RFA) of small hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) arising in cirrhosis. Investigate possible predictors of response and assess efficacy and safety of RFA as a bridge to liver transplantation (OLT). BACKGROUND: RFA has become the elective treatment of local control of HCC, although histologic data supporting radiologic assessment of response are rare and prospective studies are lacking. Prognostic impact of repeated RFA for HCC persistence is also undetermined. METHODS: Percentage of RFA-induced necrosis and tumor persistence-rate at various intervals from treatment was studied in 60 HCC (median: 3 cm; Milan-Criteria IN: 80%) isolated in 50 consecutive cirrhotic patients undergoing OLT. Single-session RFA was the only treatment planned before OLT. Histologic response determined on explanted livers was related to 28 variables and to pre-OLT CT scan. RESULTS: Mean interval RFA-->OLT was 9.5 months. Post-RFA complete response rate was 55%, rising to 63% for HCC 3 cm (P = 0.05). Post-RFA tumor persistence probability increased with time (12 months: 59%; 18 months: 70%). Radiologic response rate was 70%, not significantly different from histology. Major post-RFA morbidity was 8%. No mortality, Child deterioration, patient withdrawal because of tumor progression was observed. Post-OLT 3-year patient/graft survival was 83%. CONCLUSIONS: RFA is a safe and effective treatment of small HCC in cirrhotics awaiting OLT, although tumor size (>3 cm) and time from treatment (>1 year) predict a high risk of tumor persistence in the targeted nodule. RFA should not be considered an independent therapy for HCC.  相似文献   

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