Gastroenterology Research and Practice (Jan 2020)

Propranolol Is Associated with Lower Risk of Incidence of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Patients with Alcoholic Cirrhosis: A Tertiary-Center Study and Indirect Comparison with Meta-Analysis

  • Tzu-Hao Li,
  • Yu-Lien Tsai,
  • Chien-Fu Hsu,
  • Chih-Wei Liu,
  • Chia-Chang Huang,
  • Ying-Ying Yang,
  • Hung-Cheng Tsai,
  • Shiang-Fen Huang,
  • Yun-Cheng Hsieh,
  • Hsuan-Miao Liu,
  • Tzung-Yan Lee,
  • Ming-Chih Hou,
  • Chang-Youh Tsai,
  • Han-Chieh Lin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/1892584
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2020

Abstract

Read online

Alcoholic cirrhosis (AC) leads to enormous disease burden and occupies a substantial proportion in the etiology of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), but scarce attention has been paid to this topic. Besides, propranolol has been reported to decrease the rate of HCC in viral hepatitis. We conducted a retrospective tertiary-center cohort study to identify the HCC incidence in AC patients with or without propranolol. A total of 1,046 AC patients with hospitalization had been screened, and those with regular follow-up for three years or otherwise until the date of malignancy diagnosis without meeting exclusion criteria were enrolled; finally, 23 AC patients with propranolol and 46 AC patients without propranolol were analyzed after twofold propensity-score matching. The cumulative incidence of HCC was lower in the propranolol group (log-rank test, P=0.046). Furthermore, we undertook the meta-analysis of annual incidence of HCC in AC patients, and 1,949 publications were screened, within which eight studies were analyzed; the pooled annual incidence was 2.41%, which was higher than the calculated annual incidence of HCC in our AC cohort with propranolol (1.45%). In conclusion, propranolol is associated with decreased risk of HCC incidence in patients with AC.