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Risk-Based Long-Term Screening for Hepatocellular Carcinoma Recurrence After Living Donor Liver Transplantation
Authors:S. Hwang  D.-B. Moon  C.-S. Ahn  K.-H. Kim  T.-Y. Ha  G.-W. Song  D.-H. Jung  G.-C. Park  H.C. Lee  Y.S. Lee  Y.-H. Chung  B.A. Abdulkarim  S.-G. Lee
Affiliation:1. Division of Hepatobiliary Surgery and Liver Transplantation, Department of Surgery, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea;2. Department of Internal Medicine, Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea;3. Department of Surgery, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas, USA
Abstract:

Background

This study sought to establish an actual risk-based long-term screening protocol for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) recurrence after liver transplantation (OLT).

Methods

The study was a retrospective review of medical records from 334 HCC patients who underwent primary living donor OLT and followed up for at least 5 years.

Results

Overall 10-year patient survival rate was 67.5%, with a 4.8% perioperative mortality. HCC recurred in 68/318 (21.4%) surviving patients over a mean follow-up of 77 months. HCC recurrence was 20.7% at 5 and 22.2% at 10 years. Annual recurrence rates were 11.4%, 6.6%, and 2.0% during the first, second, and third years, respectively. Among patients within Milan criteria, the annual incidence of HCC recurrence was highest during the first 3 years; thereafter only 6 sporadic recurrences were observed during next 8 years. Among subjects beyond Milan criteria, recurrence was common during, but not after 3 years. In 43 patients (63.2%) increased alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) was an initial indication to perform further imaging studies to diagnosis recurrence, whereas they were detected incidentally on protocol screening imaging among another 25 patients (36.8%) in the absence of an AFP rise. There was a close correlation between pretransplant AFP level and AFP increase after HCC recurrence.

Conclusions

Patients beyond the Milan criteria require frequent tumor marker tests and imaging studies over the first 3 years; and those within Milan criteria require 10-years to follow-up primarily with tumor marker tests.
Keywords:
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