Search results for " hepatocellular"

showing 10 items of 592 documents

Staging systems of hepatocellular carcinoma: A review of literature

2013

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a major health problem with a high incidence and mortality all over the world. Natural history of HCC is severe and extremely variable, and prognostic factors influencing outcomes are incompletely defined. Over time, many staging and scoring systems have been proposed for the classification and prognosis of patients with HCC. Currently, the non-ideal predictive performance of existing prognostic systems is secondary to their inherent limitations, as well as to a non-universal reproducibility and transportability of the results in different populations. New serological and histological markers are still under evaluation with promising results, but they requi…

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyAsiaCarcinoma HepatocellularTime FactorsMedical OncologyGastroenterologyInternal medicineBiomarkers TumorHumansMedicineTopic HighlightNeoplasm Stagingbusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)Liver NeoplasmsGastroenterologyExternal validationReproducibility of ResultsGeneral MedicinePrognosismedicine.diseasedigestive system diseasesEuropeNatural historyHepatocellular carcinomabusinessAlgorithmsWorld Journal of Gastroenterology
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Biology and significance of alpha‐fetoprotein in hepatocellular carcinoma

2019

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common causes of cancer-related deaths globally due, in part, to the majority of patients being diagnosed with intermediate or advanced stage disease. Our increased understanding of the heterogeneous molecular pathogenesis of HCC has led to significant developments in novel targeted therapies. Despite these advances, there remains a high unmet need for new treatment options. HCC is a complex disease with multiple pathogenic mechanisms caused by a variety of risk factors, making it difficult to characterize with a single biomarker. In fact, numerous biomarkers have been studied in HCC, but alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) remains the most widely used …

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyCarcinoma HepatocellularAngiogenesisDiseaseBiologyUnmet needs03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineAntigens NeoplasmInternal medicinemedicineHumansneoplasmsPredictive biomarkerHepatologyLiver Neoplasmsmedicine.diseasedigestive system diseasesVascular endothelial growth factorchemistry030220 oncology & carcinogenesisHepatocellular carcinomaBiomarker (medicine)030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyalpha-FetoproteinsAlpha-fetoproteinBiomarkersLiver International
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NAFLD-driven HCC: Safety and efficacy of current and emerging treatment options

2022

In light of a global rise in obesity and type 2 diabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) represent an increasingly important underlying aetiology of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). HCCs arising from lipotoxicity-mediated chronic inflammation are characterised by several unique features: in contrast to virally driven HCC, up to 50% of NAFLD-HCC occurs in patients without cirrhosis and annual HCC incidence is comparatively low, complicating current surveillance strategies. On average, patients are older and are more frequently diagnosed at an advanced stage. While locoregional treatments are probably equally effective regardless of HCC aetio…

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyCarcinoma HepatocellularCirrhosisDiseaseType 2 diabetesNon-alcoholic Fatty Liver DiseaseRisk FactorsInternal medicinemedicineHumansneoplasmsHepatologybusiness.industryLiver NeoplasmsFatty livermedicine.diseasedigestive system diseasesLiver TransplantationClinical trialTreatment OutcomeLiverHepatocellular carcinomaDisease ProgressionMetabolic syndromeSteatohepatitisbusinessJournal of Hepatology
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TACE versus TAE as therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma

2008

Transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) improves survival in cirrhotic patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The optimal schedule, best anticancer agent and best technique are still unclear. TACE may not be better than transarterial embolization (TAE). HCC is very chemoresistant, thus embolization may be more important than chemotherapy. Lipiodol cannot be considered as an embolic agent and there are no data to show that it can release chemotherapeutic agents slowly. It can mask residual vascularity on CT imaging and its use is not recommended. Both TACE and TAE result in hypoxia, which stimulates angiogenesis, promoting tumor growth; thus combination of TACE with antiangiogenic agen…

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyCarcinoma HepatocellularHepatocellular carcinomaRadiofrequency ablationmedicine.medical_treatmentAntineoplastic Agentslaw.inventionRecurrencelawInternal medicineCarcinomamedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)EmbolizationChemoembolization TherapeuticSurvival rateChemotherapybusiness.industryLiver Neoplasmsmedicine.diseaseSurvival RateTransplantationOncologyHepatocellular carcinomaLipiodolRadiologybusinessmedicine.drugExpert Review of Anticancer Therapy
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Towards personalized screening for hepatocellular carcinoma: Still not there

2020

In patients with HCV-related cirrhosis the annual risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is 2–4%.1 However, with the advent of highly effective and well tolerated direct-acting antivirals...

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyCarcinoma HepatocellularHepatologybusiness.industryLiver CirrhosiMEDLINEHepatitis Cmedicine.diseaseHepatitis CMachine LearningLiver Neoplasms.Text miningHepatocellular carcinomaInternal medicinemedicinebusinessHumanJournal of Hepatology
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Direct-acting antiviral agents and risk of Hepatocellular carcinoma: Critical appraisal of the evidence

2021

Direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) revolutionized the treatment of chronic HCV-related disease achieving high rates of sustained virological response (SVR), even in advanced cirrhosis, with modest contraindications and a low rate of adverse events. However, the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) persists due to the underlying chronic liver disease, both in patients with and without history of HCC. Although some initial studies reported a presumptive high risk of HCC development after DAA therapy, more recent observational studies denied this hypothesis. The residual risk for HCC occurrence after HCV eradication seems being progressively reduced with time after SVR. Data on recurrence of HC…

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyCarcinoma HepatocellularSustained Virologic ResponseSurvivalHepatocellular carcinomaHepatitis C virusSpecialties of internal medicineDiseaseDirect-acting antiviralsDirect-acting antiviralmedicine.disease_causeChronic liver diseaseAntiviral AgentsRecurrenceInternal medicineCarcinomaHumansMedicineAdverse effectRetrospective StudiesHepatologyHepatitis C virusbusiness.industryLiver NeoplasmsGeneral MedicineHepatitis C Chronicmedicine.diseasedigestive system diseasesResidual riskRC581-951Hepatocellular carcinomaObservational studyHepatitis C virubusinessAnnals of Hepatology
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EASL Clinical Practice Guidelines: Management of hepatocellular carcinoma

2018

Liver cancer is the fifth most common cancer and the second most frequent cause of cancer-related death globally. Hepatocellular carcinoma represents about 90% of primary liver cancers and constitutes a major global health problem. The following Clinical Practice Guidelines will give up-to-date advice for the clinical management of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, as well as providing an in-depth review of all the relevant data leading to the conclusions herein. (C) 2018 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyCarcinoma Hepatocellularmedicine.medical_treatmentMilan criteriaLiver transplantation03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineResectable Hepatocellular CarcinomaHepatocellular carcinomaliver transplantation radiofrequenza ablation contrast enhanced Ultrasound antiangiogenetic drugs immunotherapyInternal medicinemedicineHumansEarly Hepatocellular CarcinomaSocieties MedicalHepatologybusiness.industryLiver NeoplasmsGastroenterologyDisease ManagementCancermedicine.diseaseBCLC Stage3. Good healthEurope030220 oncology & carcinogenesisHepatocellular carcinomaPractice Guidelines as Topic030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyLiver cancerbusinessJournal of Hepatology
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Are radiological endpoints surrogate outcomes of overall survival in hepatocellular carcinoma treated with transarterial chemoembolization?

2021

Background& Aims: Time to progression (TTP) and progression-free survival (PFS) are commonly used as surrogate endpoints in oncology trials. We aimed to assess the surrogacy relationship of TTP and PFS with overall survival (OS) in studies of transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) for unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (u-HCC) by innovative methods. Methods: A search of databases for studies of TACE for u-HCC reporting both OS and TTP or PFS was performed. Individual patient data were extracted from TTP/PFS and OS Kaplan-Meier curves of TACE arms. Pooled median TTP and OS were obtained from random-effect model. The surrogate relationships of hazard ratios (HRs) and median TTP for OS …

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyCarcinoma Hepatocellularoverall survivaltransarterial chemoembolizationtime to progressionSystemic therapy03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinemedicineOverall survivalsurrogate endpointHumansProgression-free survivalChemoembolization TherapeuticneoplasmsNeoplasm StagingHepatologybusiness.industrySurrogate endpointLiver NeoplasmsHazard ratiohepatocellular carcinomamedicine.diseaseCombined Modality TherapyConfidence intervalTreatment Outcomesurrogate endpoints030220 oncology & carcinogenesisHepatocellular carcinomaRadiological weaponDisease Progression030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyRadiologybusinessprogression-free survival
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A meta-analysis of single HCV-untreated arm of studies evaluating outcomes after curative treatments of HCV-related hepatocellular carcinoma

2017

Background & Aims: Determining risk for recurrence or survival after curative resection or ablation in patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV)-related hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is important for stratifying patients according to expected outcomes in future studies of adjuvant therapy in the era of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs). The aims of this meta-analysis were to estimate the recurrence and survival probabilities of HCV-related early HCC following complete response after potentially curative treatment and to identify predictors of recurrence and survival. Methods: Studies reporting time-dependent outcomes (HCC recurrence or death) after potentially curative treatment of HCV-relat…

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyCarcinoma HepatocellularrecurrenceHepatitis C virusmedicine.medical_treatmentmedicine.disease_causesurvivallaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRandomized controlled triallawInternal medicinemedicineAdjuvant therapyhepatocellular carcinoma; prognosis; recurrences; survivalHumansSurvival analysisHepatologyrecurrencesbusiness.industryLiver Neoplasmshepatocellular carcinomaHepatologymedicine.diseaseHepatitis Chepatocellular carcinoma; prognosis; recurrences; survival; Hepatology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisMeta-analysisHepatocellular carcinoma030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyprognosisNeoplasm Recurrence LocalbusinessAdjuvantprognosi
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The impact of antiviral treatments on the course of chronic hepatitis C: an evidence-based approach.

2004

Hepatitis C virus chronic infection is currently the most common cause of end-stage liver disease. The benefit of antiviral therapy on liver histology and its impact on the long-term course of the disease has been extensively studied. However, the results are still equivocal and the overall assessment of treatment effect remains difficult to evaluate. Although the conclusions of the last National Institute of Health Consensus Development Conferences on Hepatitis C have recently been published, several important issues still remain unanswered. We review the available data by an evidence-based approach and conclude that: 1) peginterferon alfa is more effective than conventional interferon in …

Oncologymedicine.medical_specialtyCirrhosisCarcinoma HepatocellularHepatitis C virusDiseasemedicine.disease_causeAntiviral AgentsLiver diseasechemistry.chemical_compoundMaintenance therapyPegylated interferonInternal medicineDrug DiscoverymedicineHumansViral hepatitis CRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicPharmacologyEvidence-Based Medicinebusiness.industryRibavirinLiver NeoplasmsHistological benefitHepatitis CHepatitis C Chronicmedicine.diseaseLong-term outcomeTreatment OutcomechemistryCombination treatmentImmunologybusinessPegylated interferonmedicine.drugCurrent pharmaceutical design
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