Research Article Details

Article ID: A09991
PMID: 31533893
Source: HPB (Oxford)
Title: Characteristics of atypical large well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma: a specific subtype of hepatocellular carcinoma?
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) de-differentiation is thought to correlate with size, therefore well-differentiated HCC &#8805;3&#160;cm are considered rare and not fully understood. METHODS: Patients who underwent hepatectomy for HCC between 1998-2016 were retrospectively analyzed. Patient's characteristics and recurrence-free (RFS) and overall (OS) survival were compared between those with atypical- (well-differentiated-HCC &#8805;3 cm) and typical-HCC (moderate-to-poorly-differentiated HCC &#8805;3 cm). RESULTS: Of 176 patients included in this study, 37 (21%) had atypical-HCC. Patients with atypical-HCC were less likely to be Asian ethnicity (3% vs. 17%, p&#160;=&#160;0.062), have lower rate of viral infection (14% vs. 43%, p&#160;=&#160;0.003), cirrhosis (8% vs. 27%, p&#160;=&#160;0.015). The tumors were less likely to demonstrate vascular invasion (30% vs. 59%, p&#160;=&#160;0.002), and were associated with a lower alpha-fetoprotein level (3.5&#160;ng/ml vs. 33.2&#160;ng/ml, p&#160;<&#160;0.001). Patients with atypical-HCC had a longer RFS (5-y RFS: 58.3% vs. 35.7%, p&#160;=&#160;0.016) and OS (5-y OS: 79.1% vs 53.3%, p&#160;=&#160;0.029) as compared to those with typical-HCC following univariate analysis, however this did not appear following multivariate analysis. CONCLUSION: Patients with atypical-HCC have different characteristic in terms of epidemiology, etiology, cirrhosis and vascular invasion as compared to typical-HCC. The etiology of atypical-HCC may be non-alcoholic fatty liver disease-related and/or malignant transformation of hepatocellular adenoma.
DOI: 10.1016/j.hpb.2019.08.012