JHEP Reports (Jan 2025)

Tumor burden with AFP improves survival prediction for TACE-treated patients with HCC: An international observational study☆

  • Dongdong Xia,
  • Wei Bai,
  • Qiuhe Wang,
  • Jin Wook Chung,
  • Xavier Adhoute,
  • Roman Kloeckner,
  • Hui Zhang,
  • Yong Zeng,
  • Pimsiri Sripongpun,
  • Chunhui Nie,
  • Seung Up Kim,
  • Ming Huang,
  • Wenhao Hu,
  • Xiangchun Ding,
  • Guowen Yin,
  • Hailiang Li,
  • Hui Zhao,
  • Jean-Pierre Bronowicki,
  • Jing Li,
  • Jiaping Li,
  • Xiaoli Zhu,
  • Jianbing Wu,
  • Chunqing Zhang,
  • Weidong Gong,
  • Zixiang Li,
  • Zhengyu Lin,
  • Tao Xu,
  • Tao Yin,
  • Rodolphe Anty,
  • Jinlong Song,
  • Haibin Shi,
  • Guoliang Shao,
  • Weixin Ren,
  • Yongjin Zhang,
  • Shufa Yang,
  • Yanbo Zheng,
  • Jian Xu,
  • Wenhui Wang,
  • Xu Zhu,
  • Ying Fu,
  • Chang Liu,
  • Apichat Kaewdech,
  • Rong Ding,
  • Jie Zheng,
  • Shuaiwei Liu,
  • Hui Yu,
  • Lin Zheng,
  • Nan You,
  • Wenzhe Fan,
  • Shuai Zhang,
  • Long Feng,
  • Guangchuan Wang,
  • Peng Zhang,
  • Xueda Li,
  • Jian Chen,
  • Feng Zhang,
  • Wenbo Shao,
  • Weizhong Zhou,
  • Hui Zeng,
  • Gengfei Cao,
  • Wukui Huang,
  • Wenjin Jiang,
  • Wen Zhang,
  • Lei Li,
  • Aiwei Feng,
  • Enxin Wang,
  • Zhexuan Wang,
  • Dandan Han,
  • Yong Lv,
  • Jun Sun,
  • Bincheng Ren,
  • Linying Xia,
  • Xiaomei Li,
  • Jie Yuan,
  • Zhengyu Wang,
  • Bohan Luo,
  • Kai Li,
  • Wengang Guo,
  • Zhanxin Yin,
  • Yan Zhao,
  • Jielai Xia,
  • Daiming Fan,
  • Kaichun Wu,
  • Dominik Bettinger,
  • Arndt Vogel,
  • Guohong Han

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. 101216

Abstract

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Background & Aims: Current prognostic models for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) undergoing transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) are not extensively validated and widely accepted. We aimed to develop and validate a continuous model incorporating tumor burden and biology for individual survival prediction and risk stratification. Methods: Overall, 4,377 treatment-naive candidates for whom TACE was recommended, from 39 centers in five countries, were enrolled and divided into training, internal validation, and two external validation datasets. The novel model was developed using a Cox multivariable regression analysis and compared with our original 6-and-12 model (the largest tumor size [ts, centimetres] + tumor number [tn]) and other available models in terms of predictive accuracy. Results: The proposed model, named the ‘6-and-12 model 2.0’, was generated as ‘ts + tn + 1.5×log10 alpha-fetoprotein (AFP)’, showed good discrimination (C-index 0.674) and calibration (Hosmer–Lemeshow test p = 0.147), and outperformed current existing models. An easy-to-use stratification was proposed according to the different AFP levels (≤100, 100–400, 400–2,000, 2,000–10,000, 10,000–40,000, and >40,000 ng/ml) along with the corresponding tumor burden cutoffs (8/14, 7/13, 6/12, 5/11, 4/10, and any tumor burden); that is, if the AFP level was 400–2,000 ng/ml, the stratification should be low-(≤6)/intermediate-(6–12)/high-risk (>12) strata. Hence, it could divide the patients into three distinct risk categories with a median overall survival of 45.0 (95% CI, 40.1–49.9), 30.0 (95% CI, 26.1–33.9), and 15.4 (95% CI, 13.4–17.4) months (p <0.001) from low-risk to high-risk strata, respectively. These findings were confirmed in validation and subgroup analyses. Conclusions: The 6-and-12 model 2.0 significantly improved individual outcome predictions and better stratified the candidates recommended for TACE; thus, this model could be used in both clinical practice and trial design. Impact and implications:: In this international multicentre study, we developed and internally and externally validated a novel outcome prediction model for candidates with HCC who would be ideal for TACE. The model, called the 6-and-12 model 2.0, was based on 4,377 patients from 39 centers in five countries. The model offers individualized outcome prediction, outperforming the original 6-and-12 model score and other existing metrics across all datasets and subsets. Based on different levels of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and corresponding cut-offs of tumor burden, patients could be stratified into three risk strata with significantly different survival prognoses, which could provide a referential framework to control study heterogeneity and define the target population in future trial designs.

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