Decreased Incidence of Hepatocellular Carcinoma after Directly Acting Antiviral Therapy in Patients with Hepatitis C–Related Advanced Fibrosis and Cirrhosis

Background and Aim: Existing data are controversial regarding the incidence of hepatitis C (HCV)–related hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) following directly acting antiviral (DAA) therapy. This prospective study aimed to assess incidence, and risk factorss of HCC following DAA therapy in patients with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hepatocellular carcinoma 2021-01, Vol.8, p.925-935
Hauptverfasser: Kilany, Shimaa, Ata, Lmyaa, Gomaa, Asmaa, Sabry, Aliaa, Nada, Ali, Tharwa, El-Sayed, Badra, Gamal, Abogabal, Ashraf, Elwaraky, Mohamed, Moaz, Enas, Ezzat, Sameera, Elsharawy, Ahmed, Waked, Imam
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background and Aim: Existing data are controversial regarding the incidence of hepatitis C (HCV)–related hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) following directly acting antiviral (DAA) therapy. This prospective study aimed to assess incidence, and risk factorss of HCC following DAA therapy in patients with HCV-related advanced fibrosis (F3) and cirrhosis (F4). Methods: Incidence of HCC was calculated in 1,630 patients with HCV-related F3 and F4 treated with DAA prospectively followed for up to 43 months in a single tertiary referral center and compared to historical controls. Risk factors of incident HCC were also determined. Results: The crude outcome rate was 2.15/100 person-years, significantly lower than a similar historical cohort (5.57/100 person-years). Risk of developing HCC was higher with the presence of cirrhosis (F4 vs F3, AHR 3.59) and treatment failure (vs achieving SVR, AHR 3.37). Presence of decompensated cirrhosis, platelet count < 100× 103/mL, and high AFP were independent risk factors of developing HCC. Conclusion: Incidence of HCC was significantly lower in patients with HCV-related advanced fibrosis and cirrhosis treated with DAAs than in a historical cohort of untreated patients. Decompensated cirrhosis, baseline AFP ≥ 10 ng/mL, diabetes, and nonresponse to DAA were independent risk factors of incident HCC.
ISSN:2253-5969
2253-5969
DOI:10.2147/JHC.S295330