학술논문

Sustained viral response prolonged survival of patients with C-viral hepatocellular carcinoma.
Document Type
Article
Source
Liver International. Jun2006, Vol. 26 Issue 5, p536-542. 7p. 3 Charts, 4 Graphs.
Subject
*LIVER cancer
*HEPATITIS C virus
*INTERFERONS
*CANCER patients
*ANTIVIRAL agents
Language
ISSN
1478-3223
Abstract
We conducted this retrospective study to evaluate the position of interferon therapy in the curative treatment of hepatitis C virus-associated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Methods: We compared overall and recurrence-free survival rates between 191 patients who received interferon therapy before HCC development (15 with sustained virologic response (SVR)), 53 who received interferon therapy after HCC ablation (17 with SVR), and 399 HCC patients with Child–Pugh class A liver function who did not receive interferon (controls). Results: The overall survival rate in the controls was 82.4%, 53.2%, and 28.3% at 3, 6, and 9 years, respectively, whereas that in patients who developed HCC after achieving SVR was 93.3%, 93.3%, and 93.3%; those with HCC after non-SVR, 87.8%, 56.5%, and 35.8%; SVR after HCC, 100%, 87.5%, and 59.7%; and non-SVR after HCC, 94.3%, 70.9%, and 53.2%. Cox proportional hazard regression analysis revealed that the risk of death was significantly reduced in patients with HCC after SVR and those with SVR after HCC, with a risk ratio of 0.124 (95% confidence interval (95% CI): 0.017–0.890, P=0.0378) and 0.388 (95% CI: 0.169–0.887, P=0.0250), respectively, compared with the controls. Improved survival was attributable mainly to sustained liver function among patients with SVR, and recurrence-free survival did not differ significantly. Conclusion: Interferon therapies before and after HCC development were both significantly associated with prolonged survival when SVR was achieved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]