JHEP Reports (Aug 2023)

Landscape of alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma in the last 15 years highlights the need to expand surveillance programs

  • Nicola Reggidori,
  • Laura Bucci,
  • Valentina Santi,
  • Benedetta Stefanini,
  • Lorenzo Lani,
  • Davide Rampoldi,
  • Giorgia Ghittoni,
  • Fabio Farinati,
  • Alberto Masotto,
  • Bernardo Stefanini,
  • Andrea Mega,
  • Elisabetta Biasini,
  • Francesco Giuseppe Foschi,
  • Gianluca Svegliati-Baroni,
  • Angelo Sangiovanni,
  • Claudia Campani,
  • Giovanni Raimondo,
  • Gianpaolo Vidili,
  • Antonio Gasbarrini,
  • Ciro Celsa,
  • Mariella Di Marco,
  • Edoardo G. Giannini,
  • Rodolfo Sacco,
  • Maurizia Rossana Brunetto,
  • Francesco Azzaroli,
  • Donatella Magalotti,
  • Filomena Morisco,
  • Gian Ludovico Rapaccini,
  • Gerardo Nardone,
  • Alessandro Vitale,
  • Franco Trevisani,
  • Maurizio Biselli,
  • Paolo Caraceni,
  • Annagiulia Gramenzi,
  • Francesca Benevento,
  • Alessandro Granito,
  • Luca Muratori,
  • Fabio Piscaglia,
  • Francesco Tovoli,
  • Gloria Allegrini,
  • Calogero Cammà,
  • Giuseppe Cabibbo,
  • Carmelo Marco Giacchetto,
  • Paolo Giuffrida,
  • Maria Vittoria Grassini,
  • Mauro Grova,
  • Gabriele Rancatore,
  • Caterina Stornello,
  • Valentina Adotti,
  • Tancredi Li Cavoli,
  • Fabio Marra,
  • Martina Rosi,
  • Vittoria Bevilacqua,
  • Alberto Borghi,
  • Lucia Napoli,
  • Fabio Conti,
  • G.L. Frassineti,
  • Maria Teresa Migliano,
  • Gloria Allegrini,
  • Nicoletta de Matthaeis,
  • Francesca Romana Ponziani,
  • Gabriele Missale,
  • Andrea Olivani,
  • Mario Capasso,
  • Valentina Cossiga,
  • Maria Guarino,
  • Ester Marina Cela,
  • Antonio Facciorusso,
  • Camilla Graziosi,
  • Valentina Lauria,
  • Giorgio Pelecca,
  • Marta Schirripa,
  • Fabrizio Chegai,
  • Armando Raso,
  • Alessio Bozzi,
  • Maria Stella Franzè,
  • Carlo Saitta,
  • Assunta Sauchella,
  • Elton Dajti,
  • Federico Ravaioli,
  • Maria Corina Plaz Torres,
  • Giulia Pieri,
  • Filippo Oliveri,
  • Gabriele Ricco,
  • Veronica Romagnoli,
  • Alessandro Inno,
  • Fabiana Marchetti,
  • Pietro Coccoli,
  • Antonio Malerba,
  • Alberta Cappelli,
  • Rita Golfieri,
  • Cristina Mosconi,
  • Matteo Renzulli

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 8
p. 100784

Abstract

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Background & Aims: Alcohol abuse and metabolic disorders are leading causes of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) worldwide. Alcohol-related aetiology is associated with a worse prognosis compared with viral agents, because of the lower percentage of patients diagnosed with HCC under routine surveillance and a higher burden of comorbidity in alcohol abusers. This study aimed to describe the evolving clinical scenario of alcohol-related HCC over 15 years (2006–2020) in Italy. Methods: Data from the Italian Liver Cancer (ITA.LI.CA) registry were used: 1,391 patients were allocated to three groups based on the year of HCC diagnosis (2006–2010; 2011–2015; 2016–2020). Patient characteristics, HCC treatment, and overall survival were compared among groups. Survival predictors were also investigated. Results: Approximately 80% of alcohol-related HCCs were classified as cases of metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease. Throughout the quinquennia, <50% of HCCs were detected by surveillance programmes. The tumour burden at diagnosis was slightly reduced but not enough to change the distribution of the ITA.LI.CA cancer stages. Intra-arterial and targeted systemic therapies increased across quinquennia. A modest improvement in survival was observed in the last quinquennia, particularly after 12 months of patient observation. Cancer stage, HCC treatment, and presence of oesophageal varices were independent predictors of survival. Conclusions: In the past 15 years, modest improvements have been obtained in outcomes of alcohol-related HCC, attributed mainly to underuse of surveillance programmes and the consequent low amenability to curative treatments. Metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease is a widespread condition in alcohol abusers, but its presence did not show a pivotal prognostic role once HCC had developed. Instead, the presence of oesophageal varices, an independent poor prognosticator, should be considered in patient management and refining of prognostic systems. Impact and Implications: Alcohol abuse is a leading and growing cause of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) worldwide and is associated with a worse prognosis compared with other aetiologies. We assessed the evolutionary landscape of alcohol-related HCC over 15 years in Italy. A high cumulative prevalence (78%) of metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease, with signs of metabolic dysfunction, was observed in HCC patients with unhealthy excessive alcohol consumption. The alcohol + metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease condition tended to progressively increase over time. A modest improvement in survival occurred over the study period, likely because of the persistent underuse of surveillance programmes and, consequently, the lack of improvement in the cancer stage at diagnosis and the patients’ eligibility for curative treatments. Alongside the known prognostic factors for HCC (cancer stage and treatment), the presence of oesophageal varices was an independent predictor of poor survival, suggesting that this clinical feature should be carefully considered in patient management and should be included in prognostic systems/scores for HCC to improve their performance.

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