Observations of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) management patterns from the global HCC bridge study: First characterization of the full study population.

Author:

Park Joong-Won1,Sherman Morris2,Colombo Massimo3,Roberts Lewis R.4,Schwartz Myron E.5,Degos Francoise6,Chen Pei-Jer7,Chen Minshan8,Kudo Masatoshi9,Johnson Philip James10,Huang Baisong11,Orsini Lucinda S.12

Affiliation:

1. National Cancer Center, Goyang, South Korea

2. University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

3. Maggiore Hospital, Milan, Italy

4. Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN

5. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, NY

6. Hôpital Beaujon, Clichy, France

7. Taiwan National University, Taipei, Taiwan

8. Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center, Guangzhou, China

9. Kinki University School of Medicine, Osaka, Japan

10. Birmingham University, Birmingham, United Kingdom

11. Outcome Sciences, Cambridge, MA

12. Bristol-Myers Squibb, Wallingford, CT

Abstract

4033 Background: HCC is a major health problem across the world. The global HCC BRIDGE study is the first global, large-scale, observational study to document the real-world experience of HCC patients from diagnosis to death. Methods: This longitudinal cohort study (started March 2009) includes HCC patients newly diagnosed between January 2005 and June 2011 and treated at major medical centers, with data collected retrospectively and prospectively as recorded in patient charts. Full patient enrollment is expected at the end of January 2012. Results: At the time of the first interim analysis (July 2011), 12,442 treated HCC patients were enrolled at 42 sites in Asia (n=8909, 72% [China: n=6295, 71%; Japan: n=295, 3%]), Europe (n=2040, 16%) and North America 1493 (n=1493, 12%). Mean age was 57 years; 82% were male. The predominant risk factor was HBV in Asia (76%) and HCV in Europe (48%), North America (45%) and Japan (69%). Most patients were diagnosed without surveillance (Asia, 82%; Europe, 73%; North America, 69%; Japan, 64%). In Asia, Europe and North America, the predominant BCLC stage at diagnosis was C (48%, 46%, 46%) followed by A (34%, 28%, 26%). First recorded treatments in Asia, Europe and North America were resection (31%, 15%, 21%), transplantation (1%, 3%, 1%), TACE (49%, 30%, 36%), other locoregional therapy (12%, 35%, 23%) and systemic therapy (3%, 10%, 8%). Treatments ever used (2005–2011) in Asia, Europe and North America were resection (33%, 17%, 24%), transplantation (2%, 6%, 12%), TACE (57%, 35%, 48%), other locoregional therapy (20%, 42%, 37%) and systemic therapy (9%, 20%, 21%). These results will be updated with data from the full study population (approx. 19,000 patients), and preliminary survival data will be presented. Conclusions: As the largest study of its type, in 19,000 patients worldwide, the HCC BRIDGE study provides valuable insights into global HCC disease characteristics and patient management. Based on prior analyses, differences in risk factors among regions confirm well-known trends, while other observed differences (e.g., treatment variations) may be related to country- and site-specific practices and patient characteristics.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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