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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Outcome of liver cancer patients with SARS‐CoV‐2 infection: an international, multicentre, cohort study

Sergio Muñoz- MartínezVictor SapenaAlejandro FornerJordi BruixMarco Sanduzzi-zamparelliJosé RíosMohamed BouattourMohamed El KassasCassia Regina Guedes LealTudor MocanJean-charles NaultRogerio Camargo Pinheiro AlvesHelen L. ReevesLeonardo Da FonsecaIgnacio García-juárezDavid J. PinatoMaría VarelaSaleh A. AlqahtaniMario Reis Alvares-da-silvaJuan C. BandiLorenza RimassaMar LozanoJesús M. González SantiagoFrank TackeMargarita SalaMaria Margarita AndersAnja LachenmayerFederico PiñeroAlex FrançaMaría GuarinoAlessandra ElveviGiuseppe CabibboMarkus Peck-radosavljevicÁNgela RojasMercedes VergaraChiara BraconiSonia PascualChristie PerellóVivianne MelloCarlos Rodríguez-lopeJuan AcevedoRosanna VillaniClemence HollandeValérie VilgrainAhmed TawheedCarmem Ferguson TheodoroZeno SparchezLorraine BlaiseValérie VilgrainDaniele E. Viera-alvesRobyn WatsonFlair J. CarrilhoCarlos Moctezuma-velázquezAntonio D'alessioMassimo IavaroneMaría Reig

subject

Settore MED/12 - GastroenterologiaCarcinoma HepatocellularHepatologyHepatocellular carcinomaSARS-CoV-2Liver NeoplasmsCOVID-19hepatocellular carcinomamortalityCohort Studiesliver cancerCOVID-19 TestingCross-Sectional Studiesmortality.HumansMortalityLiver cancerRetrospective Studies

description

Background & Aims Information about the impact of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in patients with liver cancer is lacking. This study characterizes the outcomes and mortality risk in this population. Methods Multicentre retrospective, cross-sectional, international study of liver cancer patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection registered between February and December 2020. Clinical data at SARS-CoV-2 diagnosis and outcomes were registered. Results Two hundred fifty patients from 38 centres were included, 218 with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and 32 with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA). The median age was 66.5 and 64.5 years, and 84.9% and 21.9% had cirrhosis in the HCC and iCCA cohorts respectively. Patients had advanced cancer stage at SARS-CoV-2 diagnosis in 39.0% of the HCC and 71.9% of the iCCA patients. After a median follow-up of 7.20 (IQR: 1.84–11.24) months, 100 (40%) patients have died, 48% of the deaths were SARS-CoV-2-related. Forty (18.4%) HCC patients died within 30-days. The death rate increase was significantly different according to the BCLC stage (6.10% [95% CI 2.24–12.74], 11.76% [95% CI 4.73–22.30], 20.69% [95% CI 11.35–31.96] and 34.52% [95% CI 17.03–52.78] for BCLC 0/A, B, C and D, respectively; p = .0017). The hazard ratio was 1.45 (95% CI 0.49–4.31; p = .5032) in BCLC-B versus 0/A, and 3.13 (95% CI 1.29–7.62; p = .0118) in BCLC-C versus 0/A in the competing risk Cox regression model. Nineteen out of 32 iCCA (59.4%) died, and 12 deaths were related to SARS-CoV-2 infection. Conclusions This is the largest cohort of liver cancer patients infected with SARS-CoV-2. It characterizes the 30-day mortality risk of SARS-CoV-2 infected patients with HCC during this period.

https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/271704/1/271704.pdf