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Tertiary Prevention of HCC in Chronic Hepatitis B or C Infected Patients

期刊

CANCERS
卷 13, 期 7, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13071729

关键词

carcinogenesis; cirrhosis; direct acting antiviral agents; interferon; nucleos(t)ide analogues; sustained virologic response

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资金

  1. Taipei Veterans General Hospital (Center of Excellence for Cancer Research) [MOHW110-TDU-B-211-144019]
  2. Chang Gung Memorial Hospital [CMRPG3J1342, CMRPG3G1281-2, CMRPG3K0841-2, CMRPG3I0271-2]
  3. National Science Council, Taiwan [NMRPG3H0473]

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Antiviral therapies play a crucial role in reducing HCC recurrence rate, protecting and improving liver function to improve survival rates for patients, but HCC remains a leading cause of cancer and cancer-related death.
Simple Summary Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) recurrence is the major obstacle concerning patients' survival. Tertiary prevention by antiviral therapies could reduce HCC recurrence rate in both chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) or hepatitis C virus (HCV) infected patients. In chronic hepatitis B (CHB) patients, nucleos(t)ide analogues (Nuc) provide a more effective HCC tertiary prevention effect than an interferon (IFN)-based regimen. In chronic hepatitis C (CHC) patients, the tertiary prevention effect by direct acting antiviral agents (DAAs) was reported non-inferior to that by IFN-based therapy. Chronic hepatitis C patients left untreated had the worst survival benefit as well as shorted recurrence-free interval than those treated by either type of antiviral regimen. Although the risk of HCC recurrence could only be decreased but not diminished by antiviral therapies due to host and microenvironmental factors beyond virus infection, antiviral therapy helps to preserve and improve liver function which makes multi-modality anticancer treatment feasible to improve survival. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) ranks as a leading cause of common cancer and cancer-related death. The major etiology of HCC is due to chronic hepatitis virus including HBV and HCV infections. Scheduled HCC surveillance in high risk populations improves the early detection rate and the feasibility of curative treatment. However, high HCC recurrence rate still accounts for the poor prognosis of HCC patients. In this article, we critically review the pathogenesis of viral hepatitis-related hepatocellular carcinoma and the evidence of tertiary prevention efficacy by current available antiviral treatment, and discuss the knowledge gap in viral hepatitis-related HCC tertiary prevention.

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