The Combination of Albumin-Bilirubin Score and Prothrombin Time Is a Useful Tool for Predicting Liver Dysfunction after Transcatheter Arterial Chemoembolization in Child-Pugh Class A Patients with Hepatocellular Carcinoma within Up-to-Seven Criteria.
Hiroaki TakayaTadashi NamisakiSoichi TakedaKosuke KajiHiroyuki OgawaKoji IshidaYuki TsujiHirotetsu TakagiTakahiro OzutsumiYukihisa FujinagaMasanori FurukawaKoh KitagawaNorihisa NishimuraYasuhiko SawadaNaotaka ShimozatoHideto KawarataniKei MoriyaTakemi AkahaneAkira MitoroHitoshi YoshijiPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2021)
Mortality and recurrence rates of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are high. Recent studies show that for patients with HCC beyond up-to-seven criteria, treatment with molecular-targeted agents (MTAs) is recommended because the treatment efficiency of transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE) is poor; further, TACE increases decline in liver function. However, the relationship between TACE and liver function decline in patients with HCC within up-to-seven criteria has not been clarified. Hence, we aimed to investigate this relationship. This retrospective observational study included 189 HCC tumors within up-to-seven criteria in 114 Child-Pugh class A patients. Twenty-four (12.7%) tumors were changed from Child-Pugh class A to B after TACE, and 116 (61.4%) tumors exhibited recurrence within 6 months after TACE. Prothrombin time (PT) and albumin-bilirubin (ALBI) score before TACE were significantly associated with liver dysfunction from Child-Pugh class A to B. The combination of PT and ALBI score before TACE had high predictive ability for liver dysfunction from Child-Pugh class A to B after TACE (specificity = 100%, sensitivity = 91.7%). The combined use of pre-TACE PT and ALBI score has a high predictive ability for liver dysfunction after TACE for Child-Pugh class A patients with HCC within up-to-seven criteria.