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Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer staging and transplant survival benefit for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma: a multicentre, cohort study - 03/08/11

Doi : 10.1016/S1470-2045(11)70144-9 
Alessandro Vitale, DrPhD a, , Rafael Ramirez Morales, PhD d, Giacomo Zanus, MD a, Fabio Farinati, MD b, Patrizia Burra, MD b, Paolo Angeli, MD c, Anna Chiara Frigo, MSc e, Paolo Del Poggio, MD f, Gianludovico Rapaccini, MD g, Maria Anna Di Nolfo, MD h, Luisa Benvegnù, MD c, Marco Zoli, MD i, Franco Borzio, MD k, Edoardo Giovanni Giannini, MD l, Eugenio Caturelli, MD m, Maria Chiaramonte, MD n, Franco Trevisani, ProfMD j, Umberto Cillo, ProfMD a

on behalf of the Italian Liver Cancer group

  Members listed in the Web Extra Material

a Unità di Chirurgia Epatobiliare e Trapianto Epatico, Azienda Ospedaliera, Università di Padova, Padova, Italy 
b Divisione di Gastroenterologia, Azienda Ospedaliera, Università di Padova, Padova, Italy 
c Dipartimento di Medicina Clinica e Sperimentale, Azienda Ospedaliera, Università di Padova, Padova, Italy 
d Istituto Oncologico Veneto IOV—IRCCS, Padova, Italy 
e Unità di Biostatistica ed Epidemiologia, Dipartimento di Medicina Ambientale e Sanità Pubblica, Università di Padova, Padova, Italy 
f Divisione di Medicina, Ospedale Treviglio Caravaggio, Treviglio, Italy 
g Cattedra di Medicina Interna II, Università Cattolica di Roma, Roma, Italy 
h Divisione di Medicina, Azienda Ospedaliera Bolognini, Seriate, Italy 
i Dipartimento di Medicina Interna, dell’Invecchiamento e Malattie Nefrologiche, Unità di Medicina Interna, Alma Mater Studiorum, Università di Bologna, Bologna, Italy 
j Unità di Semeiotica Medica, Alma Mater Studiorum, Università di Bologna, Bologna, Italy 
k Dipartimento di Medicina, Unità Operativa di Radiologia, Ospedale Fatebenefratelli, Milano, Italy 
l Dipartimento di Medicina Interna, Unità di Gastroenterologia, Università di Genova, Genova, Italy 
m Unità di Gastroenterologia, Ospedale Belcolle, Viterbo, Italy 
n Unità di Gastroenterologia, Ospedale Sacro Cuore Don Calabria, Negrar, Italy 

* Correspondence to: Dr Alessandro Vitale, Unità di Chirurgia Epatobiliare e Trapianto Epatico, Dipartimento di Chirurgia Generale e Trapianti, Via Giustiniani 2, 35128 Padova, Italy

Summary

Background

Allocation of deceased-donor livers to patients with chronic liver failure is improved by prioritising patients by 5-year liver transplantation survival benefit. The Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) staging has been proposed as the standard means to assess for prognosis of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. We aimed to create a prediction model linking the BCLC stage of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma to their 5-year liver transplant benefit.

Methods

A large cohort of consecutive patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (n=1328) from the ITA.LI.CA database (n=2951) were judged as potentially eligible for liver transplantation according to the following criteria: absence of macroscopic vascular invasion or metastases, age 70 years or younger, and absence of relevant extra-hepatic comorbidities. To assess the correlation between BCLC staging and non-liver transplantation survival, we did Cox univariate and multivariate analyses including the following covariates: BCLC stage, year of diagnosis, age, sex, cause of cirrhosis, model for end-stage liver disease score, α-fetoprotein concentrations, and treatment. Liver-transplantation survival benefit for patients was calculated, using Monte Carlo simulation analysis, as the patient’s 5-year life expectancy with liver transplantation (estimated by the Metroticket model) minus the 5-year life expectancy without liver transplantation according to BCLC stage.

Findings

83 (6%) of 1328 patients had BCLC 0 stage disease, 614 (46%) had BCLC A, 500 (38%) had BCLC B–C, and 131 (10%) had BCLC D. In the Cox non-liver transplantation survival multivariate model, hazard ratios associated with increasing BCLC stages were 1·530 (95% CI 1·107–2·116) for BCLC A versus BCLC 0, 1·572 (1·350–1·830) for BCLC B–C versus BCLC A, and 1·470 (1·164–1·856) for BCLC D versus BCLC B–C. Results of the Monte Carlo simulation analysis confirmed the significant effect of BCLC classification on transplant benefit; in the adjusted model, a median 5-year transplant benefit of 11·19 months (IQR 10·73–11·67) for BCLC 0, 13·49 months (11·51–15·57) for BCLC A, 17·36 months (15·06–19·28) for BCLC B–C, and 28·46 months (26·38–30·34) for BCLC D.

Interpretation

Liver transplantation could result in survival benefit for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and advanced liver cirrhosis (BCLC stage D) and in those with intermediate tumours (BCLC stages B–C), regardless of the nodule number–size criteria (ie, Milan criteria), provided that macroscopic vascular invasion and extra-hepatic disease are absent.

Funding

None.

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Vol 12 - N° 7

P. 654-662 - juillet 2011 Retour au numéro
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