Effect of age on the short- and long-term outcomes of patients undergoing curative liver resection for HCC

Few studies have evaluated the outcomes of curative liver resection (LR) in octogenarian patients, analysed cancer-specific survival (CSS) with HCC-related death or explored the age-varying effect of HCC-related death in elderly patients undergoing LR. We aim to determine the effect of age on the sh...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of surgical oncology 2022-06, Vol.48 (6), p.1339-1347
Hauptverfasser: Tan, Laura L.Y., Chew, Valerie T.W., Syn, Nicholas, Tan, Ek-Khoon, Koh, Ye-Xin, Teo, Jin-Yao, Cheow, Peng-Chung, Jeyaraj, Prema Raj, Chow, Pierce K.H., Chan, Chung-Yip, Chung, Alexander Y.F., Ooi, London L.P.J., Goh, Brian K.P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Few studies have evaluated the outcomes of curative liver resection (LR) in octogenarian patients, analysed cancer-specific survival (CSS) with HCC-related death or explored the age-varying effect of HCC-related death in elderly patients undergoing LR. We aim to determine the effect of age on the short and long-term outcomes of LR for HCC. Between 2000 and 2018, 1,092 patients with primary HCC who underwent LR with curative intent were retrospectively reviewed. The log-rank test and Gray's test were used to assess the equality of survivor functions and competing risk-adjusted cumulative incidence functions between patients in the three age categories respectively. Regression adjustment was used to control for confounding bias via a Principal Component Analysis. Quantile, Firth logistic, Cox, and Fine-Gray competing risk regression were used to analyse continuous, binary, time-to-event, and cause-specific survival respectively. Restricted cubic splines were used to illustrate the dose-effect relationship between age and patient outcomes. The study comprised of 764 young patients (
ISSN:0748-7983
1532-2157
DOI:10.1016/j.ejso.2021.12.027