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Alpha-Fetoprotein Detection of Hepatocellular Carcinoma Leads to a Standardized Analysis of Dynamic AFP to Improve Screening Based Detection

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Listed:
  • Thomas G Bird
  • Polyxeni Dimitropoulou
  • Rebecca M Turner
  • Sara J Jenks
  • Pearce Cusack
  • Shiying Hey
  • Andrew Blunsum
  • Sarah Kelly
  • Catharine Sturgeon
  • Peter C Hayes
  • Sheila M Bird

Abstract

Detection of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) through screening can improve outcomes. However, HCC surveillance remains costly, cumbersome and suboptimal. We tested whether and how serum Alpha-Fetoprotein (AFP) should be used in HCC surveillance. Record linkage, dedicated pathways for management and AFP data-storage identified i) consecutive highly characterised cases of HCC diagnosed in 2009–14 and ii) a cohort of ongoing HCC-free patients undergoing regular HCC surveillance from 2009. These two well-defined Scottish patient cohorts enabled us to test the utility of AFP surveillance. Of 304 cases of HCC diagnosed over 6 years, 42% (129) were identified by a dedicated HCC surveillance programme. Of these 129, 47% (61) had a detectable lesion first identified by screening ultrasound (US) but 38% (49) were prompted by elevated AFP. Despite pre-HCC diagnosis AFP >20kU/L being associated with poor outcome, ‘AFP-detected’ tumours were offered potentially curative management as frequently as ‘US-detected’ HCCs; and had comparable survival. Linearity of serial log10-transformed AFPs in HCC cases and in the screening ‘HCC-free’ cohort (n = 1509) provided indicators of high-risk AFP behaviour in HCC cases. An algorithm was devised in static mode, then tested dynamically. A case/control series in hepatitis C related disease demonstrated highly significant detection (p

Suggested Citation

  • Thomas G Bird & Polyxeni Dimitropoulou & Rebecca M Turner & Sara J Jenks & Pearce Cusack & Shiying Hey & Andrew Blunsum & Sarah Kelly & Catharine Sturgeon & Peter C Hayes & Sheila M Bird, 2016. "Alpha-Fetoprotein Detection of Hepatocellular Carcinoma Leads to a Standardized Analysis of Dynamic AFP to Improve Screening Based Detection," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 11(6), pages 1-22, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0156801
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156801
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    1. Ruben Amoros & Ruth King & Hidenori Toyoda & Takashi Kumada & Philip J. Johnson & Thomas G. Bird, 2019. "A continuous-time hidden Markov model for cancer surveillance using serum biomarkers with application to hepatocellular carcinoma," METRON, Springer;Sapienza Università di Roma, vol. 77(2), pages 67-86, August.

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