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Hepatocellular Carcinoma

dr. Tjatur Winarsanto SpPD

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a primary malignancy of the liver. It is now the third leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide, with over 500,000 people affected. Hepatitis and excessive alcohol are the leading causes of HCC. (Hepatitis B or hepatitis C, 20%) or with cirrhosis (about 80%). HCC may present with right upper quadrant pain, weight loss, jaundice, bloating from ascites, and signs of decompensated liver disease.

Microscopically, there are four cytological types:


fibrolamellar, pseudoglandular (adenoid), pleomorphic (giant cell) and clear cell.

Local expansion, intrahepatic spread, and distant metastases.


Serum AFP rise in 40-64%. On CT, HCC can have three distinct patterns of growth:
A single large tumor Multiple tumors Poorly defined tumor with an infiltrative growth pattern

Diagnostic Procedures
In patients with lesions less than 1 cm, >>>> conservative management with close follow-up and no biopsy is recommended. In patients with 1- to 2-cm lesions, a biopsy should be performed, Patients with lesions greater than 2 cm, cirrhosis, characteristic imaging studies, and elevated AFP values can be managed without biopsy.

Patients with large tumors who are not candidates for resection or transplantation, >>>>>> biopsy is frequently not indicated.

Important features that guide treatment include: Size Spread (stage) Involvement of liver vessels Presence of a tumor capsule Presence of extrahepatic metastases Vascularity of the tumor

AJCC/UICC Classification System

Child-Pugh score
The Child-Pugh score is used to assess the prognosis of chronic liver disease, mainly cirrhosis. To determine treatment required and the necessity of liver transplantation.

The score employs five clinical measures of liver disease. Each measure is scored 1-3, with 3 indicating most severe derangement.

Chronic liver disease is classified into Child-Pugh class A to C, employing the added score from above.

Treatment/Management

Surgical resection Liver transplantation Percutaneous ablation


Alcohol injection Radiofrequency ablation

Radical

Potentially Curative

Transarterial embolization and chemoembolization Palliative Chemotherapy.

There is no agreement on a common treatment strategy for patients with HCC worldwide, and several proposals have been published. The three major curative therapies, resection, liver transplantation and percutaneous treatments, compete as first-line treatment option for small single HCC in patients with well-preserved liver function.

Surgery: Resection and Transplantation


Surgery is the mainstay of HCC treatment and achieve the best outcomes in well-selected candidates. Less than 5% patients resectable Factors affecting resectability:
Size<5cm number of tumors involvement of major structures hepatic function no extra-hepatic spread no portal hypertension

Requires experienced surgical and supporting team 5 year survival 60%-70% 3 year recurrence 45 60%

Transplantation
Milan Criteria :
Single HCC 5 cm or Up to three nodules 3 cm No extra hepatic spread About 10 % qualify for listing The major drawback of transplantation is
The scarcity of donors. The long waiting time.

While Waiting : Adjuvant therapies whilst on the waiting list are used in most centers to prevent tumor progression.

Resection Vs Transplantaion
138 pt with cirrhosis and HCC 85 LT and 53 Resection Childs A and B
Liver Transplantation 1, 3, 5-year Survival 84, 74, 62 % Resection 83, 57, 50 %

1, 3, 5-year Disease 83, 72, 60 % free

70, 44, 31 %

Liovet hepatology 1999

Percutaneous Treatments
For patients who cannot undergo resection. Complete responses in more than 80% of tumors smaller than 3 cm in diameter, but in 50% of tumors of 3-5 cm in size. 5-year survival rates of 40%-60%. reported in patients with small single tumors, commonly <2 cm in diameter.

Although these treatments provide good results, they are unable to achieve response rates and outcomes comparable with surgical treatments.
Transarterial Embolization and Chemoembolization is recommended as first line non-curative therapy for non-surgical patients with large/multifocal HCC who do not have vascular invasion or extrahepatic spread

Percutaneous Ethanol Injection

2 07 patients with cirrhosis + HCC < 5 cm 100% Ethanol Follow up was 25 months No complications 4.3 sessions per patient 88% complete necrosis 1 ,2,3-year survival rates: 90,80,63%

Radiofrequency Ablation

BEFORE RF

AFTER RF

Complete Necrosis Progression (3ys) Survival (3ys)

PEI 88 % 40,4% 57,6 %

RFA 96 % 15,3 % 71,1 %


Lin et al. 2004

Complete Necrosis Mean No. of Sessions

RFA (52) 47 (90%)


1,2

PEI (60) 48 (80 %)


4,8

Radiology 1999; 210:655

RFA : More expensive, more complication, more seeding. PEI: More Sessions, less effective in tumors 2cm

Palliative Therapies
Primary treatment for unresectable HCC. Embolization agents usually gelatin or microspheres may be administered together with selective intra-arterial chemotherapy mixed with lipiodol (chemoembolization). Doxorubicin, mitomycin and cisplatin are the commonly used antitumoral drugs. Arterial embolization achieves partial responses in 15-55% of patients, and significantly delays tumour progression and vascular invasion.

Transarterial Chemoembolization

Meta-analysis of 7 randomized controlled trials


2 yr survival: 41% (19-63%) Treatment response: 35% (16-61%) Average no. of sessions: 1-4.5 Risks:
Infection Tumor lysis syndrome Hepatic failure

Llovel J He aloI2003"37:429

Systemic Treatments
A meta-analysis of seven RCTs comparing tamoxifen vs. conservative management, comprising 898 patients, showed neither antitumoral effect nor survival benefit of tamoxifen. Thus, this treatment is discouraged in advanced HCC. Systemic chemotherapy has been tested in nine RCT. The most active agents in vitro and in vivo are doxorubicin and cisplatin. Systemic doxorubicin has been tested in more than 1000 patients within clinical trials and provides partial responses in around 10% of cases, without any evidence of survival advantages .

Chemotherapy
Palliative not Curative. Regional (Intra-arterial) better that systemic. Resistant to many agents.

Follow-up
Despite optimal treatment, hepatocellular carcinoma continues to have a high recurrence rate. majority of which occur within 2 years. Early recurrence after resection is associated with a dismal prognosis, reducing 5-year survival rates from 70% to 30%. Common extrahepatic sites of metastatic disease include lung, bone, CNS, and adrenal glands. Factors that increase the likelihood of recurrence include the presence of :
multiple foci of hepatocellular carcinoma, liver capsule invasion, tumor size (>5 cm). Vascular invasion, both microscopic and macroscopic.

In general, a CT scan at 1 month postresection. Serum alpha-fetoprotein measurements and repeat imaging studies (eg, ultrasound, CT, MRI) every 3-6 months. After 2-3 years, safe to increase the followup interval.

Bruix J, Sherman M, 2005: Hepatology 42:1208-1236.

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