Hamid Tavakkoli, MD Associate Prof. of Gastroenterology.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Intermediate stage HCC management
Advertisements

PROSTATE CANCER Dr Samad Zare Assistant Proffesor of Urology Shaheed Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences.
Staging Strategy and Treatment for Patients With HCC
Radiotherapeutic Option in Management of Hepatocellular Carcinoma
High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU) for Liver Tumour Dr Dai Wing Chiu Queen Mary Hospital.
Interventional Oncology Michael Kotton MD October 27, 2012.
Ayman Abdo MD, AmBIM, FRCPC
Maarten van Leeuwen, Joost Nederend and Robin Smithuis
Hepatocellular Carcinoma Detection and Treatment
Hepatobiliary pathology By Dr/ Dina Metwaly
HCC Guidelines and recommendation Typical feature (wash in/wash out) New mass/nodule NoYes Alternative imaging technique Atypical featureTypical.
Eleni Galani Medical Oncologist
Consultant Radiologist Prince Sultan Military Medical City
Hepatocellular Carcinoma Diagnostic and Therapeutic Strategies
Epidemiology  Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common type of primary liver cancer.  Worldwide, its prevalence follows that of hepatitis B.
Cholestatic liver diseases:
HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA Monton. HCC in Thailand Most common cancer in Thai male Incidence 5 x 100,000 / year Male : female = 3-8:1 Age > 40 yr.
Guzman, Alexander Joseph Hipolito, April Lorraine
Case Report Patient PP Submitted by:Matthew Clower, MSIV Faculty:Sandra Oldham, MD Date:29 August 2007 Radiological Category:Principal Modality (1): Principal.
Chapter 28 Lung Cancer. Mosby items and derived items © 2009 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. 2 Objectives  Describe the epidemiology of.
4 YEARS SURVIVAL OF 100 HCC PATIENTS TREATED WITH DC BEAD: A RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS Marta Burrel Vascular Interventional Unit Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer.
ACRIN 6673 Percutaneous Radiofrequency Ablation of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Cirrhotic Patients: A Multi-Center Study.
Surveillance for HCC. Surveillance in cancer Definition: Repeated application of a test over time with the aim of reducing disease-specific mortality.
Slides last updated: June 2015 CRC: CLINICAL FEATURES.
Diagnosis. Multifactorial pathogenesis of HCC Normal liver HepatitisCirrhosisHCC Cell death Regeneration Persistent/chronic hepatitis Fibrosis HBV HCV.
Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis
Diagnosing and Managing Cancers of the Liver and Bile Ducts Jeffrey S. Weinstein, MD Medical Director of Liver Transplantation Methodist Dallas Medical.
Case Report # 1 Submitted by:James Korf, MS4 Faculty reviewer:Sandra Oldham, MD Date accepted:27 August 2014 Radiological Category:Principal Modality (1):
Liver Imaging Reporting and Data System with MR Imaging: Evaluation in Nodules 20 mm or Smaller Detected in Cirrhosis at Screening US Radiology 2015; 275:
Hamid Tavakkoli, MD Associate Prof. of Gastroenterology.
Evaluating the Patient With Abnormal Liver Tests-2 פרופ ' צבי אקרמן מבית חולים הדסה הר הצופים.
HEPATIC TUMORS Dr.Cengiz Pata Gastroenterology Department Yeditepe University,Istanbul.
HCC Guidelines
Hepatocellular Carcinoma from the ACC to Med E Paul M. Johnson Department of Internal Medicine University of North Carolina Hospitals February 12, 2010.
Hepatocellular carcinoma related to Hbv and Hcv
Student SYB Chet Cunha MS IV January 22, History 61 y/o M with known HCV x 5 yrs. presenting with vague abdominal discomfort. Outside CT showed.
The Royal Marsden Solitary fibrous tumours The outcomes of 106 patients illustrating the unpredictable biological behaviour N Alexander, K Thway, JM Thomas,
HCC Guidelines and recommendation Diagnostic algorithm and recall policy.*One imaging technique only recommended in centers of excellence with high-end.
Clinical History Patient presents with a palpable upper abdominal mass Patient states possible clinical history of abdominal hernia.
CLINICAL OUTCOME OF 251 PATIENTS WITH EXTRAHEPATIC METASTASIS AT INITIAL DIAGNOSIS OF HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA: DOES TRANSARTERIAL CHEMOEMBOLIZATION IMPROVE.
Imaging of Focal Nodular Hyperplasia: A Review
Thomas Sersté1,2, Vincent Barrau3, Violaine Ozenne1, Marie Pierre Vullierme3, Pierre Bedossa5,6, Olivier Farges4, Dominique-Charles Valla1,6, Valérie Vilgrain3,6,
Management of Hepatocellular carcinoma
Radiology 2012; 265:780–789 Departments of Radiology Kanazawa University Graduate School of Medical Science Azusa Kitao, MD et al. R3 Kwon Young Ho.
간담도 암에서의 PET 의 활용 핵의학과 홍일기. 18 F-FDG PET: Warburg effect.
GASTROENTEROLOGY 2010;138:493–502 심 재 준 월요 저널.
심 재 준심 재 준 Am J Gastroenterol 2007;102:
Visceral fat accumulation is an independent risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma recurrence after curative treatment in patients with suspected NASH.
Clinical outcomes and prognostic factors of patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma treated with sorafenib as first-line therapy : A Korean multicenter.
Liver mass Mazen Hassanain. Radiology Arterial enhancement: adenoma, FNH, hemangioma, HCC, NET mets Portal enhancement: CRC liver mets.
TACE for HCC in a regional centre: 5 year audit and assessment of baseline predictors of outcome Iain DS Morrison, #R Kasthuri, EH Forrest, S Barclay,
Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Diagnosis and Management
The Value of Measurement of Circulating Tumor Cells in Hepatocellular Carcinoma Nashwa Sheble, Gehan Hamdy, Moones A Obada, Gamal Y Abouria, Fatma Khalaf.
Jordi Bruix, Maria Reig, Morris Sherman  Gastroenterology 
Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) staging classification and treatment schedule. Patients with very early hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) (stage 0) are.
Presented By: Sally Saad Mandour Esawy
Locally-Advanced HCC:
Chapter 14 Hepatic Tumors, Malignant 1
Jordi Bruix, Maria Reig, Morris Sherman  Gastroenterology 
HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA (HCC) at
Volume 68, Issue 4, Pages (April 2018)
Liver cancer: Approaching a personalized care
Epidemiology & First option of treatment
Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Patients with
Microvascular Invasion as a Predictor of Response to Treatment with Sorafenib and Transarterial Chemoembolization for Recurrent Intermediate-Stage Hepatocellular.
Professor of Internal Medicine, HBP unit
CT-SCAN & MRI LIRADS 2018 Dr. NGUYỄN HỒ TRÚC LINH - MRI.
Dr gavidel journal club govaresh
Jordi Bruix, Maria Reig, Morris Sherman  Gastroenterology 
Prognostic effect of complete pathologic response following TACE on HCC patients undergoing liver resection or transplantation Prognostic effect of complete.
Presentation transcript:

Hamid Tavakkoli, MD Associate Prof. of Gastroenterology

Recommendations HCC screening 1. Patients at high risk for developing HCC should be entered into surveillance programs (LevelI). 2. Patients on the transplant waiting list should be screened for HCC because in the USA the development of HCC gives increased priority for OLT, and because failure to screen for HCC means that patients may develop HCC that may progress beyond listing criteria without the physician being aware

HCC surveillance in recommended Asian male hepatitis B carriers over age 40 Asian female hepatitis B carriers over age 50 Hepatitis B carrier with family history of HCC African/North American Blacks with hepatitis B Cirrhotic hepatitis B carriers Hepatitis C cirrhosis Stage 4 primary biliary cirrhosis Genetic hemachromatosis and cirrhosis Alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency and cirrhosis Other cirrhosis

Surveillance benefit uncertain Hepatitis B carriers younger than 40 (males) or 50 (females) Hepatitis C and stage 3 fibrosis Non-cirrhotic NAFLD

Recommendations 3. Surveillance for HCC should be performed using ultrasonography. 4. Patients should be screened at 6 month intervals. 5. The surveillance interval does not need to be shortened for patients at higher risk of HCC.

Recommendations 6. Nodules found on ultrasound surveillance that are smaller than 1 cm should be followed with ultrasound at intervals from 3-6 months. If there has been no growth over a period of up to 2 years, one can revert to routine surveillance

Recommendations 7. Nodules larger than 1 cm found on ultrasound screening of a cirrhotic liver should be investigated further with either 4-phase multidetector CT scan or dynamic contrast enhanced MRI. If the appearances are typical of HCC (i.e., hypervascular in the arterial phase with washout in the portal venous or delayed phase), the lesion should be treated as HCC. If the findings are not characteristic or the vascular profile is not typical, a second contrast enhanced study with the other imaging modality should be performed, or the lesion should be biopsied

Role of AFP in Diagnosis Alphafetoprotein has long been used for the diagnosis of HCC AFP is insufficiently sensitive or specific for use as a surveillance assay. AFP can be elevated in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) and in some metastases from colon cancer Therefore, the finding of a mass in the liver with an elevated AFP does not automatically indicate HCC.

AFP and HCC Since AFP can be elevated in either condition, it is recommended that it no longer be used. Thus, the diagnosis of HCC must rest on radiological appearances and on histology

Radiological Diagnosis of HCC HCC can be diagnosed radiologically, without the need for biopsy if the typical imaging features are present.

HCC CT, MR

HCC CT, US, MR

69-year-old man with HCV-related cirrhosis and HCC

Recommendations 8. Biopsies of small lesions should be evaluated by expert pathologists. Tissue that is not clearly HCC should be stained with all the available markers including CD34, CK7, glypican 3, HSP-70, and glutamine synthetase to improve diagnostic accuracy

Recommendations 9. If the biopsy is negative for patients with HCC, the lesion should be followed by imaging at 3-6 monthly intervals until the nodule either disappears, enlarges, or displays diagnostic characteristics of HCC. If the lesion enlarges but remains atypical for HCC a repeat biopsy is recommended

Recommendations 10. To best assess the prognosis of HCC patients it is recommended that the staging system take into account tumour stage, liver function and physical status. The impact of treatment should also be considered when estimating life expectancy. Currently, the BCLC system is the only staging system that accomplishes these aims

HCC Rx Early stage disease includes patients with preserved liver function (Child– Pugh A and B) with solitary HCC or up to 3 nodules 3 cm in size. These patients can be effectively treated by resection, liver transplantation or percutaneous ablation

HCC Rx The intermediate stage consists of Child–Pugh A and B patients with large/multifocal HCC who do not have cancer related symptoms and do not have macrovascular invasion or extrahepatic spread. optimal candidates for transarterial chemoembolization (TACE).

HCC Rx Patients who present with cancer symptoms and/or with vascular invasion or extrahepatic spread comprise the advanced stage. They have a shorter life expectancy (50% survival at 1 year) and are candidates for sorafenib

HCC Rx Finally, patients with extensive tumor involvement leading to severe deterioration of their physical capacity [WHO performance status >2] and/or major impairment of liver function (Child–Pugh C) are considered end stage. Their median survival is less than 3 months.

Fibrolamellar HCC Generally in young individuals Lacking a background of chronic liver disease and other risk factors for HCC The clinical presentations generally nonspecifi c Alpha-fetoprotein level is typically within the normal range in most cases

F HCC Imaging studies have a major role in clinical diagnosis, but pathology is the gold standard in confi rming diagnosis. Pathological characteristics of FLHCC include the presence of tumor cells with a deeply eosinophilic cytoplasm and macronucleoli surrounded by abundant fi brous bands. The most effective treatment for FLHCC is aggressivesurgical resection.

FHCC

Focal Nodular Hyperplasia