Surgery Clinical Trial
Official title:
Hepatocarcinoma Recurrence on the Liver Study - Part2
Rationale for the trial. To evaluate the impact of surgery on hepatocarcinoma recurrence. Thus, to evaluate the impact of different clinical, radiological, histopathological variables on recurrence after surgical treatment. The nature of this study will allow to observe, over time, the distribution of the considered collection variables, allowing a strictly observational monitoring of possible associations able to suggest models or interpretations, which can then be the basis for the construction of prospective and randomized studies.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is 1 of the 5 most common malignancies worldwide and the third
most common cause of cancer related mortality of 500,000 deaths globally every year. Although
more common in East Asia, the incidence of HCC is increasing in the Western world. Hepatic
resection is the first-line therapeutic option and it is accepted as a safe treatment with a
proven impact on prognosis, with a low operative mortality as the result of advances in
surgical techniques and perioperative management. Nevertheless, surgical resection is
applicable in only about 20% to 30% of patients with HCC, since most have poor hepatic
reserve function caused by underlying chronic liver disease and multifocal hepatic
distributions of HCC.
Although hepatic resection is one of the curative treatments for hepatocellular carcinoma,
the recurrence rate of HCC even after curative resection is quite high, estimated to be
approximately 50 % during the first 3 years and more than 70 % during the first 5 years after
curative resection, and so the postoperative long term results remain unsatisfactory. In this
scenario the role of liver transplantation has been, in the last years, predominant, due to
the ability of transplant to reduce disease recurrence, because of the treatment of liver
cirrhosis associate to HCC which represent the most important driver to recurrence. Otherwise
the scarcity of organ source has been a boost to the spread of liver resection, not only
confined in the boundary taken into account in the BCLC algorithm (guidelines endorsed by
EASL and AASLD), but even in patients considered not suitable for curative treatment as well
as liver resection.
Although surgical treatment has been adopted in the last years in more patients outside the
Guidelines with satisfactory results in term of mortality, morbidity and Short term
oncological outcomes, the limits of this approach remain the long term disease free survival.
Risk factor for recurrence has been yet identified in the last years as hcc dimension,
grading, microvascular invasion and satellitosis. The evidence that these two prognostic
factors could negatively impact on the long term prognosis enhancing the risk of recurrence,
has led many Author to propose anatomical resection (segmental resection) as the ideal
surgical treatment to reduce these risks in HCC patients. Otherwise literature results are in
conflict regarding the real benefit of this approach. In fact in many patients with HCC and
underlying cirrhosis the anatomical approach is not feasible due to the risk of postoperative
liver failure. So a parenchyma-sparing technique has been developed and compared to
anatomical resection in term of oncological outcomes. Even if radiological and clinical
pictures seems to predict the prognosis of resected HCC, the pathophysiology behind the
recurrence is still unclear.Currently, data suggests two type of recurrence presentation:
intrahepatic metastasization (IM) and multicentric occurrence (MO) of de novo HCC based on
the precancerous status of the remnant diseased liver. Several effort has been done to
preoperatively identified the 2 pattern of recurrences. Genetical studied has been performed,
especially in eastern countries to better clarify and understand the impact of the 2
phenomena. In the japanese guidelines are described histo-pathological hallmarks able, in
retrospect, to define the type of recurrence, metastases or de novo tumor. Moreover, several
recent studies including a metanalysis, seems to show that de novo recurrence could have a
better prognosis when approached surgically, with a significant improvement in overall and
disease-free survival rates. The model of HCC recurrence is not yet well clarified as well as
the best treatment of hcc recurrence. On these data is based the proposal to create an
Italian study project on surgical treatment and surgical outcomes of hepatocellular carcinoma
in term of disease free survival. The idea growth up from the finding that, although the
curative intent of surgical approach, results are not so satisfactory and it seems to not
ameliorate the long term patient's prognosis and long term disease-free outcome without the
need for therapies, conditioning the real everyday life of patient. In Italy is not yet
present a study group that draw together the experience of surgical centers with low,medium
or high volume of surgical procedures on HCC, with the intent to offer radical cure through
surgery as the first choice treatment. The intent is to collect Big Data through a common
database, with high power of analysis and high scientific impact, to better understand the
mechanism which regulate HCC recurrence and to identify the best clinical treatment option
for these patients.
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