To identify prognostic features and to define the role of liver transplantation in severe autoimmune chronic active hepatitis, findings before and after corticosteroid therapy in 111 patients were correlated with outcome and compared with the findings in 24 patients who had been selected independent
Hepatocellular carcinoma in corticosteroid-treated severe autoimmune chronic active hepatitis
β Scribed by Kenneth K. Wang; Albert J. Czaja
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 571 KB
- Volume
- 8
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0270-9139
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
To determine the frequency of hepatocellular cancer in corticosteroid-treated severe autoimmune chronic active hepatitis and to identify risk factors for its development, 124 patients who were selected by uniform criteria, treated comparably and followed systematically for 11 1 f 6 months were evaluated. Hepatocellular cancer was diagnosed in three patients (2%) after 66, 99 and 174 months of observation, respectively. The incidence of hepatocellular cancer was 1 per 350 patient-years of follow-up. All three patients with hepatocellular cancer had cirrhosis for at least 5 years. The frequency of neoplasm in patients with cirrhosis of at least 5 years' duration was 7%. The incidence of hepatocellular cancer in these patients with cirrhosis was 1 per 182 patient-years of follow-up, and the probability of tumor was 29% after 13 years. Late elevation of the serum a-fetoprotein level was associated with the presence of neoplasm but normal levels did not exclude the diagnosis. We conclude that patients with corticosteroidtreated severe autoimmune chronic active hepatitis are at risk for hepatocellular cancer. This risk is greatest in patients with cirrhosis for at least 5 years. Such patients are candidates for cancer surveillance.
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