Author:
Agarwal Ankit,Biswas Sagnik,Swaroop Shekhar,Aggarwal Arnav,Agarwal Ayush,Jain Gautam,Elhence Anshuman,Vaidya Arun,Gupte Amit,Mohanka Ravi,Kumar Ramesh,Mishra Ashwani Kumar,Gamanagatti Shivanand,Paul Shashi Bala,Acharya Subrat Kumar,Shukla Akash,Shalimar Shalimar
Abstract
BACKGROUND
There is scant literature on hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in patients with Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS).
AIM
To assess the magnitude, clinical characteristics, feasibility, and outcomes of treatment in BCS-HCC.
METHODS
A total of 904 BCS patients from New Delhi, India and 1140 from Mumbai, India were included. The prevalence and incidence of HCC were determined, and among patients with BCS-HCC, the viability and outcomes of interventional therapy were evaluated.
RESULTS
In the New Delhi cohort of 35 BCS-HCC patients, 18 had HCC at index presentation (prevalence 1.99%), and 17 developed HCC over a follow-up of 4601 person-years, [incidence 0.36 (0.22-0.57) per 100 person-years]. BCS-HCC patients were older when compared to patients with BCS alone (P = 0.001) and had a higher proportion of inferior vena cava block, cirrhosis, and long-segment vascular obstruction. The median alpha-fetoprotein level was higher in patients with BCS-HCC at first presentation than those who developed HCC at follow-up (13029 ng/mL vs 500 ng/mL, P = 0.01). Of the 35 BCS-HCC, 26 (74.3%) underwent radiological interventions for BCS, and 22 (62.8%) patients underwent treatment for HCC [transarterial chemoembolization in 18 (81.8%), oral tyrosine kinase inhibitor in 3 (13.6%), and transarterial radioembolization in 1 (4.5%)]. The median survival among patients who underwent interventions for HCC compared with those who did not was 3.5 years vs 3.1 mo (P = 0.0001). In contrast to the New Delhi cohort, the Mumbai cohort of BCS-HCC patients were predominantly males, presented with a more advanced HCC [Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer C and D], and 2 patients underwent liver transplantation.
CONCLUSION
HCC is not uncommon in patients with BCS. Radiological interventions and liver transplantation are feasible in select primary BCS-HCC patients and may improve outcomes.
Publisher
Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.