Managements of recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma after liver transplantation: A systematic review

AIM: To investigate the efficacy(survival) and safety of treatments for recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC) in liver transplantation(LT) patients.METHODS: Literature search was performed on available online databases without a time limit until January 2015. Clinical studies describing survival a...

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Published in:World journal of gastroenterology : WJG Vol. 21; no. 39; pp. 11185 - 11198
Main Authors: de'Angelis, Nicola, Landi, Filippo, Carra, Maria Clotilde, Azoulay, Daniel
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 21-10-2015
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Summary:AIM: To investigate the efficacy(survival) and safety of treatments for recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC) in liver transplantation(LT) patients.METHODS: Literature search was performed on available online databases without a time limit until January 2015. Clinical studies describing survival after HCC recurrence in LT patients were retrieved for a fulltext evaluation. A total of 61 studies were selected: 13 case reports, 41 retrospective case series, and 7 retrospective comparative studies.RESULTS: Based on all included studies, the mean HCC recurrence rate was 16% of all LTs for HCC. A total of 1021 LT patients experienced HCC recurrence. The median time from LT to HCC recurrence was 13 mo(range 2-132 mo). The majority of patients(67%) presented with HCC extra-hepatic recurrences, involving lung, bone, adrenal gland, peritoneal lymph nodes, and rarely the brain. Overall survival after HCC recurrence was 12.97 mo. Surgical resection of localized HCC recurrence and Sorafenib for controlling systemic spread of HCC recurrence were associated with the higher survival rates(42 and 18 mo, res-pectively). However, Sorafenib, especially when combined with m TOR, was frequently associated with severe side effects that required dose reduction or discontinuation CONCLUSION: Management of recurrent HCC in LT patients is challenging and associated with poor prognosis independently of the type of treatment.
Bibliography:AIM: To investigate the efficacy(survival) and safety of treatments for recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma(HCC) in liver transplantation(LT) patients.METHODS: Literature search was performed on available online databases without a time limit until January 2015. Clinical studies describing survival after HCC recurrence in LT patients were retrieved for a fulltext evaluation. A total of 61 studies were selected: 13 case reports, 41 retrospective case series, and 7 retrospective comparative studies.RESULTS: Based on all included studies, the mean HCC recurrence rate was 16% of all LTs for HCC. A total of 1021 LT patients experienced HCC recurrence. The median time from LT to HCC recurrence was 13 mo(range 2-132 mo). The majority of patients(67%) presented with HCC extra-hepatic recurrences, involving lung, bone, adrenal gland, peritoneal lymph nodes, and rarely the brain. Overall survival after HCC recurrence was 12.97 mo. Surgical resection of localized HCC recurrence and Sorafenib for controlling systemic spread of HCC recurrence were associated with the higher survival rates(42 and 18 mo, res-pectively). However, Sorafenib, especially when combined with m TOR, was frequently associated with severe side effects that required dose reduction or discontinuation CONCLUSION: Management of recurrent HCC in LT patients is challenging and associated with poor prognosis independently of the type of treatment.
Nicola de’Angelis;Filippo Landi;Maria Clotilde Carra;Daniel Azoulay;Unit of Digestive, Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Surgery, and Liver Transplantation, Henri-Mondor Hospital;Inserm, Unité 4394-MACBEth, 94010 Créteil, France;Department of Advanced Biomedical Sciences, University Federico Ⅱ of Naples;University Paris 7, Denis Diderot, Rothschild Hospital;Inserm, Unité 955-IMRB, 94010 Créteil, France
Recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma;Liver transplan
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Author contributions: de’Angelis N and Azoulay D were at the origin of the work; de’Angelis N and Carra MC performed the systematic review of the literature (search, evaluation, selection, and quality assessment of the articles), data extraction, data analysis, and manuscript drafting; Landi F was the third blind reviewer and participated at the manuscript drafting and corrections; Azoulay D contributed at the final version of the manuscript with corrections and criticism.
Telephone: +33-1-49812348 Fax: +33-1-49812432
Correspondence to: Nicola de’Angelis, MD, PhD, Unit of Digestive, Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Surgery, and Liver Transplantation, Henri-Mondor Hospital, Université Paris Est - UPEC, 51, Avenue du Maréchal de Lattre de Tassigny, 94010 Créteil, France. nic.deangelis@yahoo.it
ISSN:1007-9327
2219-2840
DOI:10.3748/wjg.v21.i39.11185