Hepatocellular carcinoma risk in hepatitis C stage-3 fibrosis after sustained virological response with direct-acting antivirals
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Publication date
2021
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Publisher
Wiley
Citation
Maria Sanchez-Azofra, Inmaculada Fernandez, Maria L Garcia-Buey, Lourdes Dominguez-Dominguez , Conrado M. Fernandez- Rodriguez, Antonio Mancebo, Lucia Bonet, Pablo Ryan, Francisco Gea, Antonio Diaz-Sanchez, Marian Garcia-Mayor, Luz Martin-Carbonero, Pilar Castillo Grau, Maria Luisa Manzano, Leticia Gonzalez-Moreno, Federico Pulido, Maria L Gutierrez, José M Moreno Planas, Irene M García-Mengual, Guillermo Cuevas, Antonio Guerrero, Miguel Rivero, Maria E Portales, Maria L Montes and Antonio Olveira.Hepatocellular carcinoma risk in hepatitis C stage-3 fibrosis after sustained virological response with direct-acting antivirals.Liver International. 2021 dec; 41(12):2885–2891.
Abstract
Background & Aims
Patients with chronic hepatitis C and stage 3 fibrosis are thought to remain at risk of hepatocellular carcinoma after sustained virological response. We investigated this risk in a large cohort of patients with well-defined stage 3 fibrosis.
Methods
We performed a multicentre, ambispective, observational study of chronic hepatitis C patients with sustained virological response after treatment with direct-acting antivirals started between January and December 2015. Baseline stage 3 was defined in a two-step procedure: we selected patients with transient elastography values of 9.5-14.5 kPa and subsequently excluded those with nodular liver surface, splenomegaly, ascites or collaterals on imaging, thrombopenia or esophago-gastric varices. Patients were screened twice-yearly using ultrasound.
Results
The final sample comprised 506 patients (median age, 57.4 years; males, 59.9%; diabetes, 17.2%; overweight, 44.1%; genotype 3, 8.9%; HIV coinfection, 18.4%; altered liver values, 15.2%). Median follow-up was 33.7 (22.1-39.1) months. Five hepatocellular carcinomas and 1 cholangiocarcinoma were detected after a median of 29.4 months (95% CI: 26.8-39.3), with an incidence of 0.47/100 patients/year (95% CI: 0.17-1.01). In the multivariate analysis, only males older than 55 years had a significant higher risk (hazard ratio 7.2 [95% CI: 1.2-41.7; P = .029]) with an incidence of 1.1/100 patients/year (95% CI: 0.3-2.8).
Conclusions
In a large, well-defined cohort of patients with baseline hepatitis C stage-3 fibrosis, the incidence of primary liver tumours was low after sustained virological response and far from the threshold for cost-effectiveness of screening, except in males older than 55 years.












