Reuters Health Information: REFILE-Alpha-fetoprotein-expressing HCCs predict poorer transplant outcome
REFILE-Alpha-fetoprotein-expressing HCCs predict poorer transplant outcome
Last Updated: 2016-10-12
(Corrects percentage in par 5 from 747% to 74%)
By David Douglas
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The substantial minority of
hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients with tumors not
expressing alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) have better outcomes
following liver transplantation, according to a retrospective
study.
"Alpha-fetoprotein has long been known to be a biomarker in
hepatocellular carcinoma, however, a significant proportion of
patients with HCC do not express the biomarker," Dr. Vatche G.
Agopian told Reuters Health by email.
He added, "We specifically examined the cancer outcomes of
patients who had tumors which did not express AFP, and found
that controlling for other factors such as tumor size and
number, patients whose tumors do not express AFP were more
likely to have more favorable pathologic characteristics and
diminished post-transplant HCC recurrence."
As reported October 5 online in JAMA Surgery, Dr. Agopian of
the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and colleagues
studied 655 patients who underwent liver transplantation between
1989 and 2013. About two-thirds - 68.7% - had AFP-producing
tumors. The remaining 38.3% did not.
Both groups had similar characteristics, but non-AFP tumors
were more likely to be smaller, fewer and less poorly
differentiated. The non-AFP group had significantly superior
recurrence-free survival at one year (88% versus 76%), three
years (74% versus 59%) and five years (67% versus 51%).
Five-year recurrence rates were also lower (8.8% versus 22.0%).
"Even for patients who did experience posttransplant
recurrence, the median time to recurrence was significantly
longer for the patients with non-AFP-producing tumor," the
researchers report.
Overall five-year survival was better, and recurrence
lowest, among patients with non-AFP-producing tumors within the
Milan criteria (71% survival and 6% recurrence) and survival was
poorest, and recurrence highest, for patients with AFP-producing
tumors outside the Milan criteria (40% survival and 42%
recurrence).
Among significant predictors of recurrence among patients
with non-AFP-producing tumors were radiologic findings of more
than two tumors (hazard ratio, 4.98), cumulative diameter
outside the Milan criteria (HR, 10.0) and microvascular (HR,
3.07) and macrovascular invasion (HR, 8.75).
Our findings, say the investigators, "are consistent with
the few prior studies demonstrating this association of AFP
status with pathologic differentiation and vascular invasion."
Summing up, Dr. Agopian said, "Incorporating serum AFP to
the current radiological selection criteria may significantly
improve transplant candidate selection."
In an editorial, Drs. Barry Schlansky and Susan L. Orloff of
Oregon Health and Science University in Portland observe,
"Evidence supports a role for AFP in identifying patients with a
poor prognosis after (liver transplantation), but it remains
elusive how to incorporate AFP status into liver allocation
policy, which prioritizes patients by medical urgency."
Nevertheless, they conclude, "As the incidence of HCC surges
despite a relatively fixed donor pool, the inclusion of AFP
status into the allocation policy could facilitate the
redistribution of scarce organs to patients with or without HCC
likely to benefit the most."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2e9Mq9Z and http://bit.ly/2dMqMg7
JAMA Surg 2016.
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