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Medline ® Abstract for Reference 68

of 'Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma and recommendations for surveillance in adults with chronic liver disease'

68
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Surveillance for hepatocellular cancer with ultrasonography vs. computed tomography -- a randomised study.
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Pocha C, Dieperink E, McMaken KA, Knott A, Thuras P, Ho SB
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Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2013;38(3):303. Epub 2013 Jun 10.
 
BACKGROUND: Guidelines recommend screening for hepatocellular cancer (HCC) with ultrasonography. The performance of ultrasonography varies widely. Computed tomography (CT) is less operator dependent.
AIM: To compare the performance and cost of twice-a-year ultrasonography to once-a-year triple-phase-contrast CT for HCC screening in veterans. We hypothesised that CT detects smaller HCCs at lower overall cost.
METHOD: One hundred and sixty-three subjects with compensated cirrhosis were randomised to biannual ultrasonography or yearly CT. Twice-a-year alpha-feto protein testing was performed in all patients. Contingency table analysis using chi-squared tests was used to determine differences in sensitivity and specificity of screening arms, survival analysis with Kaplan-Meier method to determine cumulative cancer rates. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to examine predictive factors.
RESULTS: Hepatocellular cancer incidence rate was 6.6% per year. Nine HCCs were detected by ultrasonography and eight by CT. Sensitivity and specificity were 71.4% and 97.5%, respectively, for ultrasonography vs. 66.7% and 94.4%, respectively, for CT. Although 58.8% of screen-detected HCC were early stage (Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer stage A), only 23.5% received potentially curative treatment despite all treatment options being available. HCC-related and overall mortality were 70.5% and 82.3%, respectively, in patients with screen-detected tumour. Overall costs were less for biannual ultrasonography than annual CT.
CONCLUSIONS: Biannual ultrasonography was marginally more sensitive and less costly for detection of early HCC compared with annual CT. Despite early detection, HCC-related mortality was high. These data support the use of biannual ultrasonography for HCC surveillance in a US patient population (NCT01350167).
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Hepatitis C Resource Center, Minneapolis VA Health Care System, Minneapolis, MN 55417, USA. pocha004@umn.edu
PMID