Clinical features of small hepatocellular carcinomas as assessed by histologic grades
Autor: | Etsuo Inoue, Makoto Fujita, Shingi Imaoka, Shoji Nakamori, Yo Sasaki, Hiroshi Nakano, Chikazumi Kuroda, Hiroshi Kasugai, Osamu Ishikawa, Takeshi Iwanaga, Shingo Ishiguro, Hiroshi Furukawa |
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Rok vydání: | 1996 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Pathology Carcinoma Hepatocellular Adenoma Malignancy Gastroenterology Internal medicine Carcinoma Humans Adenomatous hyperplasia Medicine Neoplasm Invasiveness Grading (tumors) Survival rate Aged business.industry Liver Neoplasms Capsule Middle Aged Prognosis medicine.disease Staining Survival Rate Female Surgery alpha-Fetoproteins business |
Zdroj: | Surgery. 119:252-260 |
ISSN: | 0039-6060 |
DOI: | 10.1016/s0039-6060(96)80110-3 |
Popis: | Background. Ninety-seven patients with small hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) measuring 3 cm or less in size and three patients with adenomatous hyperplasia who underwent radical hepatic resection were examined in this study. Methods. The lesions were classified into four groups according to the following histologic grading criteria: group A, adenomatous hyperplasia (n=3); group B, early HCC (n=6); group C, well-differentiated HCC (wHCC) (n=32); and group D, moderately or poorly differentiated HCC (n=59). The involvement factors that seemed to be important or to characterize the progression of HCC and the survival rates were compared among the four histologic groups. Results. The frequency of patients with tumors larger than 2.0 cm in size and that of patients with 200 or more ng/ml serum α-fetoprotein increased with the progression of histologic malignancy. Tumor staining on the angiogram, capsular formation, and extranodular invasion were never seen in groups A and B, but they began to appear in group C and increased remarkably in group D. The 5-year survival rates of the patients in groups B, C, and D were 100%, 60%, and 27%, respectively, and statistically significant differences were seen among them. In comparative evaluation of the group C patients the lesions that showed no tumor staining had no capsule, and those that had no capsule had no extranodular invasion. The 5-year survival rate of patients with wHCC without extranodular invasion (81%) was significantly higher than that of patients with extranodular invasion (35%) (p Conclusions. It may be recommended to provide the category of wHCC without extranodular invasion for pathologic classification of clinically early HCC (i.e., HCC of high curability). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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