Guest guest Posted January 7, 2006 Report Share Posted January 7, 2006 The American Journal of Gastroenterology Volume 101 Page 91 - January 2006 doi:10.1111/j.1572-0241.2006.00364.x Volume 101 Issue 1 Effect of the Etiology of Viral Cirrhosis on the Survival of Patients with Hepatocellular Carcinoma Chiara Cantarini, M.D.1, Franco Trevisani, M.D.1, Morselli-Labate, Ph.D.2, Gianludovico Rapaccini, M.D.3, Fabio Farinati, M.D.4, Paolo Del Poggio, M.D.5, Di Nolfo, M.D.6, a Benvegnù, M.D.7, Marco Zoli, M.D.1, Franco Borzio, M.D.8, and Mauro Bernardi, M.D.1 for the Italian Liver Cancer (ITA.LI.CA) group. OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to assess whether hepatocellular carcinoma occurring in the setting of hepatitis B or C virus infection has different prognosis. METHODS: We performed a multicentric case-control study comparing 102 pairs of patients affected by hepatitis B virus- or hepatitis C virus-related hepatocellular carcinoma. Patients were matched for sex (male/female: 84/18 pairs), age, center, and period of enrollment, underlying chronic liver disease (cirrhosis/chronic hepatitis: 97/5 pairs), Child-Pugh class (A/B/C: 70/25/7 pairs), hepatocellular carcinoma stage (nonadvanced/advanced: 50/52 pairs) and, when possible, modality of cancer diagnosis (75 pairs: 47 during and 28 outside surveillance). RESULTS: In the whole population, patients with hepatitis B tended to have a poor prognosis than those with hepatitis C (p= 0.160), and this difference became statistically significant among the patients with an advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (p= 0.025). Etiology, Child-Pugh class, gross pathology, and alpha-fetoprotein were the significant independent prognostic factors in the whole population. The distribution of these prognostic factors did not differ between patients with hepatitis B or hepatitis C, both in the whole population and in the subgroup of advanced hepatocellular carcinomas. CONCLUSION: Hepatitis B virus-related hepatocellular carcinomas have a greater aggressiveness than hepatitis C virus-related tumors, which becomes clinically manifest once they have reached an advanced stage. (Am J Gastroenterol 2006;101:91–98) _________________________________________________________________ Don’t just search. Find. Check out the new MSN Search! http://search.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200636ave/direct/01/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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