2018
DOI: 10.7861/clinmedicine.18-2-s66
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Surveillance for hepatocellular cancer

Abstract: high in patients with cirrhosis who develop HCC. 8 Mortality data from the UK for HCC demonstrates that this is rising in parallel with the incidence rates of HCC such that in 2015 there were approximately 1,700 deaths due to HCC. Since cirrhosis is readily identified and the risk of HCC is known, regular surveillance testing using ultrasound scanning is proposed to identify HCC early and to facilitate curative treatment.9 This rationale is supported by many international guidelines for the management of patie… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…In addition, those with NAFLD-related HCC have a worse prognosis, since they have a shorter survival time, a more advanced tumor at diagnosis and a lower probability of liver transplantation [31,45] . This reinforces the idea that a rewording of current HCC screening recommendations is needed so that these high-risk patients can be diagnosed via routine assessment [3,5,46] . It is also understood that, because of the high prevalence of this type of liver disease, the extension of screening to this whole group would greatly increase health spending, making it less viable [47] .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 68%
“…In addition, those with NAFLD-related HCC have a worse prognosis, since they have a shorter survival time, a more advanced tumor at diagnosis and a lower probability of liver transplantation [31,45] . This reinforces the idea that a rewording of current HCC screening recommendations is needed so that these high-risk patients can be diagnosed via routine assessment [3,5,46] . It is also understood that, because of the high prevalence of this type of liver disease, the extension of screening to this whole group would greatly increase health spending, making it less viable [47] .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 68%
“… 19 Although serum AFP has been routinely tested for HCC diagnosis, it exhibits a low sensitivity and specificity iñ40% of negative patients. 20 Circulating soluble HMGB1 was examined as a useful predictor for advanced HCC patients treated with sorafenib and hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy. 21 However, no significant difference in serum HMGB1 level between HCC patients and healthy controls was observed in another cohort.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, potential physical and psychosocial harms of surveillance, including false-positive testing resulting in unnecessary and risk-associated procedures such as liver biopsy must also be considered, and surveillance should be targeted to those patients who are most likely to benefit. 22 …”
Section: Background and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%