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Cancer Research and Treatment > Volume 51(1); 2019 > Article
Zhaohui, Shunli, Bin, Shaoqiang, Yunpeng, Ming, Lijian, and Gang: Hepatic Resection Provides Survival Benefit for Selected Intermediate-Stage (BCLC-B) Hepatocellular Carcinoma Patients

Abstract

Purpose

The intermediate stage of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) (Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer [BCLC] B) comprises a highly heterogeneous population, and the treatment strategy is still controversial. Because of the heterogeneity, a subclassification of intermediate-stage HCCs was put forward by Bolondi according to the ‘beyond Milan and within up-to-7’ criteria and Child-Pugh score. In this study, we aim to analyze the prognosis of BCLC-B stage HCC patients who received hepatic resection according to the Bolondi’s subclassification.

Materials and Methods

One thousand and one hundred three patients diagnosedwith HCC and treatedwith hepatic resectionwere enrolled in our hospital between 2006 and 2012. According to Bolondi’s subclassification, the BCLC-B patients were divided into four groups. Recurrence-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) were analyzed.

Results

According to Bolondi’s subclassification, the BCLC-B patients were divided into four groups: B1 (n=41, 18.7%), B2 (n=160, 73.1%), B3 (n=11, 5.0%), and B4 (n=7, 3.2%). Significant difference was observed between B1 and other groups (B1 vs. B2, p=0.022; B1 vs. B3, p < 0.001; B1 vs. B4, p < 0.001), but no difference for B2 vs. B4 (p=0.542) and B3 vs. B4 (p=0.542). In addition, no significant differences were observed between BCLC-A and BCLC-B1 group for both RFS (p=0.087) and OS (p=0.643). In multivariate analysis, BCLC-B subclassification was not a risk factor for both OS (p=0.263) and RFS (p=0.892).

Conclusion

In our study, HCC patients at B1 stagewere benefited from hepatic resection and had similar survival to BCLC-A stage patients. Our study provided rationality of hepatic resection for selected BCLC-B stage HCC patients instead of routine transarterial chemoembolization.

Introduction

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth most prevalent neoplasm and the third most frequent cause of cancer mortality in the world [1]. Despite improvements in diagnosis and treatment of surgical techniques and perioperative care, the prognosis of HCC remains far from satisfactory [2].
The Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) system is widely used for prognosis prediction and treatment strategy selection [3,4]. According to the criteria, hepatic resection and liver transplantation are recommended for early stage tumors (stage 0 and stage A), while patients on intermediate-stage are only suitable for palliative treatment, like transarterial chemoembolization (TACE). However, the intermediate stage of HCC (BCLC stage B) comprises a highly heterogeneous population, and the treatment strategy is still controversial [5].
According to the BCLC staging system, the hepatic resection should not be recommended to the patients with BCLC-B patients, while retrospective studies have demonstrated that hepatic resection is superior to palliative treatments (TACE) for BCLC-B patients [6,7]. A research group in Italy analyzed the treatment selection and prognosis of 405 HCC cases in the BCLC stage B by the Italian Liver Cancer group [8]. Only 40% of HCC cases in the BCLC stage B underwent TACE. However, TACE couldn’t obviously prolong overall survival (OS) than hepatic resection (median survival, 27 months vs. 37 months). Similarly, Vitale et al. [9] conducted a retrospective study involving 2090 HCC cases in the different BCLC stage patients who were enrolled between 2000 and 2012 by the Italian Liver Cancer group. They revealed that BCLC-B patients may benefit most from hepatic resection than non-surgical treatments. The focus of disputes is the heterogeneity of BCLC-B patients over tumor load, age, liver function, and possible comorbidities.
Because of the heterogeneity, a subclassification of intermediate-stage HCCs was put forward by Bolondi et al. [10] in 2012 according to the ‘beyond Milan and within up-to-7’ criteria, Child-Pugh score, patient’s performance status (tumor-related) and portal vein thrombosis. The novel concept divided the BCLC-B patients into four subgroups (Table 1). Different from the recommendation of classical BCLC staging system, this system recommends liver transplantation or hepatic resection as the first treatment option for B1 patients. It recommends sorafenib or TACE for B2-B4 patients, which is consistent with the classical BCLC staging system. However, the usefulness of the subclassification of BCLC-B is also controversial. Weinmann et al. [11] analyzed 254 BCLC-B patients receiving TACE. The median OS for stage B1-B4 were 28.5, 22.8, 12.3, and 5.9 months, but the log-rank test showed no significant survival differences in subclassification. On the contrary, another study conducted by Giannini et al. [12] assessed the prognosis of 269 untreated HCC patients observed in the period 1987-2012. They found the median survival progressively decreased from stage B1 (25 months) through stages B2 (16 months) and B3 (9 months), to stage B4 (5 months, p < 0.001) and a significantly different survival between contiguous stages. Furthermore, a recent study reported a modified Bolondi's subclassification system (Kinki criteria) [13] combining B2 and B3 group, but no more studies verified the effectiveness of Kinki criteria.
In this study, we aim to analyze the prognosis of BCLC-B stage HCC patients who received hepatic resection according to the Bolondi’s subclassification and explore the rationality of hepatic resection for BCLC-B HCC patients.

Materials and Methods

1. Study population

Patients diagnosed with HCC and received hepatectomy were enrolled in our hospital between 2006 and 2012. The final diagnosis of HCC was confirmed by pathological examination of the specimen. All patients were > 18 years of age, with complete clinical and laboratory data. We collected the clinicopathological variables including sex, age, hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), α-fetoprotein (AFP), capsulation, lymphatic metastasis, tumor size. As for platelet count, we used the standard of 150/mm3 as the cutoff value [14,15]. The following criteria were considered to help diagnose HCC : a history of chronic hepatitis,the imaging tests (computed tomography [CT] or magnetic resonance imaging scan of the abdomen) and the level of AFP. The exclusion criteria were as follows: (1) patients with mixed HCC and cholangiocarcinoma; (2) patients with no follow-up data; and (3) patients receiving TACE or Sorafenib before or after operation.

2. Subclassification of BCLC-B stage

Patients were divided into three groups: BCLC-A, BCLC-B, and BCLC-C according to the American Association for the Study of the Liver Guidelines (AASLD) [16]. And patients with Child-Pugh A and B liver function, multifocal HCC (two to three tumors > 3 cm in maximal diameter or more than three tumors regardless of size) and lacking of vascular invasion comprise the intermediate-stage disease (BCLC-B) [10]. Furthermore, a novel classification system proposed by Bolondi divided the BCLC-B patients into four subgroups from B1 to B4 (Table 1).
In terms of the modified Bolondi's subclassification system, the subclasses B1, B2, and B3 refer to Child-Pugh scores of 5-7 points and ‘in’ in terms of the ‘up-to-7’ criteria; subclass B2 refers to Child-Pugh scores of 5-7 points with ‘out’ of the ‘up-to-7’ criteria, and subclass B3 refers to Child-Pugh scores of 8-9 points with either ‘in’ or ‘out’ of the ‘up-to-7’ criteria, respectively.

3. Surgical procedures

Hepatic resection, including subsegmentectomy, segmentectomy, bisegmentectomy, trisegmentectomy, right trisectionectomy, right hepatectomy, and left hepatectomy, was performed as proposed by the Committee of the International Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association of Brisbane 2000 system [17]. Tumor thrombectomy or combined diaphragmatic resection was performed when necessary.

4. Follow-up

Patients were regularly followed up at outpatient clinics. Patients received a physical examination, liver ultrasound, chest X-ray, and serum AFP test at each follow-up. Abdominal CT scan was performed every 6-12 months or when recurrence was suspected. Recurrence was defined as the emergence of clinical, radiological, and/or pathologic diagnosis of the tumor from a previous origin locally or distantly. Once recurrence was confirmed, salvage treatments, including further surgery, percutaneous ablation, or transcatheter arterial chemoembolization, were selected as needed.

5. Statistical analysis

Recurrence-free survival (RFS) was calculated from the date of surgery to the date of recurrence, and OS from the date of surgery to the date of HCC-associated death. Survival curves among groups were calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method. Univariate analysis of prognostic variables was performed by log-rank test and multivariate analysis by Cox proportional-hazards model. A p-values of < 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant. All statistical analyses were performed using package of rms in R ver. 2.14.1 (http://www.r-project.org/).

6. Ethical statement

Informed consent was obtained, and procedures were carried out with prior approval of the Ethics Committee of the First Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University (Guangzhou, China).

Results

1. Patients

A total of 1,103 patients were eligible for the study. The median age at diagnosis was 50 years (range, 21 to 79 years), and there were 970 men and 133 women. HBsAg was positive in 946 patients (85.7%). Increased AFP (≥ 400 ng/mL) was found in 560 cases (50.8%), and 299 patients (27.1%) had a low platelet count (< 150×109/L). And 718 patients (65.1%) had tumors larger than 5 cm. As to lymphatic metastasis, lymphatic metastasis was found in 73 patients (6.6%). Details of features are shown in Table 2. The follow-up time ranged from 4 to 131 months. Seventeen point six percent patients were lost to follow-up.

2. Survival according to BCLC-stage

The median RFS and OS were 12 months and 30 months. According to the BCLC stage, we classified the HCC patients into three stages: BCLC-A (n=530, 48.1%), BCLC-B (n=219, 19.9%), and BCLC-C (n=354, 32.1%). The median survival was 92 months in the BCLC-A, 30 months in BCLC-B, and 10 months in BCLC-C, respectively. Furthermore, the median RFS was 36 months in the BCLC-A, 9 months in BCLC-B, and 4 months in BCLC-C, respectively. A significant difference was observed between BCLC stage by log-rank test (p < 0.05) (Fig. 1A and B).

3. Bolondi’s subclassification

According to Bolondi’s subclassification, the BCLC-B patients were divided into four groups: B1 (n=41, 18.7%), B2 (n=160, 73.1%), B3 (n=11, 5.0%), and B4 (n=7, 3.2%). Most of the patients (n=201, 91.8%) were B1 group or B2 group. The median survival was 75 months, 28 months, 9.5 months, and 8 months for B1-B4 group. Results from the log-rank test showed that obvious difference was observed between B1 group and other groups (B1 vs. B2, p=0.022; B1 vs. B3, p < 0.001; B1 vs. B4, p < 0.001), but no difference for B2 vs. B4 (p=0.542), B3 vs. B4 (p=0.542), and B2 vs. B3 (p=0.645) (Fig. 2A).
In addition, the median RFS was 21 months, 8 months, 3 months and 4 months for B1-B4 groups. And results from the log-rank test showed significant survival differences for B1 vs. B2 (p=0.041) and B1 vs. B3 (p=0.024), but no difference for the B2 vs. B3 (p=0.274) and B3 vs. B4 (p=0.483) (Fig. 2B).
In multivariate analysis, Bolondi’s subclassification had no significant effect for RFS (p=0.892) and OS (p=0.263). Tumor size was the only independent risk predictor of OS (hazard ratio [HR], 2.74; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 1.58 to 4.74; p < 0.001) for BCLC-B patients. In addition, tumor size (HR, 2.31; 95% CI, 1.42 to 3.74; p=0.001) and sex (HR, 0.36; 95% CI, 0.15 to 0.82) were independent risk predictors p=0.015) for RFS (Table 3).

4. Modified Bolondi’s subclassification system (Kinki criteria)

The median OS for modified subclassification is 58 months, 14 months and 9 months, and the median RFS is 29 months, 5 months and 3 months. Although obvious difference was observed between B1 and other groups for OS (B1 vs. B2, p < 0.001; B1 vs. B3, p < 0.001) and RFS (B1 vs. B2, p=0.478; B1 vs. B3, p < 0.001), there was still no obvious difference for RFS (p=0.722) and OS (p=0.337) between B2 and B3 according to Kinki criteria (Fig. 2C and D).

5. BCLC-A stage vs. BCLC-B1 group

Subsequently, the 1-, 3-, and 5-year OS rate was 88, 71, and 68% for BCLC-A stage and 92%, 78%, and 66% for BCLC-B1 subclassification. Correspondingly, the 1-, 3-, and 5-year recurrence rate was 70%, 56%, and 48% for BCLC-A stage and 59%, 40%, and 32% for BCLC-B1 subclassification. The log-rank test revealed that no significant differences were observed between BCLC-A and BCLC-B1 group for both RFS (p=0.087) and OS (p=0.643) (Fig. 1C and D).

Discussion

The BCLC staging system, endorsed by European Association for the Study of Liver (EASL) and AASLD, provides prognostic score and guidance for therapeutic decisions for HCC patients based on tumor staging criteria, liver function and health status [18,19]. Intermediate stage HCC (BCLC-B) patients are a very heterogeneous population in terms of tumor size, tumor number and liver function [13]. On account of the heterogeneity, increasing researchers have begun to create a novel subclassification system to improve the staging-treatment association. In 2012, Bolondi et al. [10] proposed an innovative classification system. Thereafter, many studies had been carried out to prove the effectiveness of Bolondi’s subclassification. A recent study designed by Ciria et al. [20], involving 80 BCLC-B patients received TACE and hepatic resection between 2007 and 2012, revealed that overall survival was 40% with a median follow-up of 29.5 months (0.07-96.9) and 5-year survival rates were 62.9%, 28.1%, and 15.4%, respectively (p=0.004) for B1, B2, and B3-4 stages.
In our study, we found the overall survival trends were remarkable in B1 stages, but no difference for the test B2 vs. B3 and B3 vs. B4. In addition, Bolondi’s subclassification had no significant effect for RFS (p=0.892) and OS (p=0.263) in multivariate analysis. This illustrates that Bolondi’s subclassification cannot totally distinguish the BCLC-B patients who received hepatic resection, especially the subclass B2 to B4. For this reason, a research from Kinki University School of Medicine in Japan put forward a novel classification system by modifying the Bolondi’s subclassification [13]. In this modified Bolondi’s subclassification system (Kinki criteria), the biggest change is putting B2 and B3 group together. Then patients with intermediate-stage HCC are classified into 3 groups. Further analysis of validity of the Kinki criteria by Arizumi et al. [21] with 425 HCC patients who underwent TACE, and the result revealed that the median overall survival was 3.9 years in the BCLC subclass B1 group, 2.5 years in the B2 group, and 1.1 years in the B3 group (p < 0.001), and survival curves were stratified with significant differences. In our study, there was no obvious difference for RFS (p=0.722) and OS (p=0.337) between B2 and B3 according to Kinki criteria (Fig. 2C and D). Therefore,both of the two subclassifications may be not suitable to distinguish BCLC-B2-B4 patients who received hepatic resection. And these findings stress once again that BCLC stage B is a heterogeneous category.
Although TACE was considered as the main treatment for those patients, it is not always the case in the clinical work because of the heterogeneity. Several groups proposed that therapeutic approach is different according to subclassification. As it is recently stated in a study from the Italian Liver Cancer Group in which TACE for BCLC-B was analyzed on 405 patients, "TACE cannot be considered the best approach for BCLC stage B patients who represent a heterogeneous population and are often suitable for more aggressive therapies, which lead to a better survival” [8]. Similarly, Zhong et al. [6] reported a wide single center experience with similar results. In fact, with deepened understanding of liver cirrhotic and improved operative techniques, hepatic resection may be a much more feasible and safe choice for some BCLC-B patients. In our study, we found that the BCLC-B1 patients with hepatic resection had a better prognosis than the B2-B4 patients and no significant difference in RFS and OS between the BCLC-A and the subclass B1 group. Although many studies believed the only TACE is indicated for intermediate-stage HCC [22,23], a recent randomized controlled trial (RCT) conducted by Yin et al. [24], including 173 patients with multinodular HCC, revealed that there were no significant differences in the 30-day and in the 90-day mortality between the hepatic resection and TACE groups for BCLC-B patients. However, the hepatic resection group had significantly better overall survive than the TACE group. In addition, a meta-analysis including 50 retrieved papers shows a statistically significantly higher overall survival in hepatic resection group than in TACE group in HCC within the BCLC stage B alone (HR, 0.48; 95% CI, 0.25 to 0.90) [25]. Furthermore, in the research of Ciria et al. [20], no significant difference were found in the HCC patients with BCLC-B1 who underwent live resection with those who received TACE treatment for 5-year survival rate (63.2% vs. 62.5%). Therefore, in our opinion, Bolondi’s subclassification may be used to the selection of part of BCLC-B patients who may benefit from hepatic resection. On the other hand, as for patients in the subclass B2-B4, TACE may be a more appropriate treatment, which could reduce the risk of liver failure.
Some limitations have been found in our study. Firstly, the main limitation is the retrospective nature, which may result in selection bias. We have been carrying on a prospective multicenter RCT comparing hepatic resection versus TACE+ radiofrequency ablation for BCLC-B stage HCC patients (RCT: NCT02616926). Secondly, owing to the severe liver function injury and huge tumor burden, there are only six and five patients who received hepatic resection for subclass B3 and B4 and 18.6% patients were lost to follow up in BCLC-B stage HCC patients, which may cause a statistical discrepancy. This is why the median survival of B4 group longer than the B3 group in our study.
In our study, we stress once again that BCLC stage B is a heterogeneous category and the overall survival trends were remarkable in B1 stages according to Bolondi’s subclassification for HCC patients with hepatic resection. In addition, no significant difference in RFS and OS between the BCLC-A and the B1 stages were found, suggesting that some BCLC-B patients may benefit from hepatic resection. Therefore, our study provided rationality of hepatic resection for selected BCLC-B stage HCC patients instead of routine TACE.

Conflicts of Interest

Conflict of interest relevant to this article was not reported.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by Sun Yat-Sen University Clinical Research 5010 Program (Grant number: 2015012).

Fig. 1.
(A) Overall survival according to the Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) staging system. (B) Recurrence-free survival according to the BCLC staging system. (C) Overall survival of BCLC-A and BCLC-B1. (D) Recurrence-free survival of BCLC-A and BCLC-B1.
crt-2018-038f1.jpg
Fig. 2.
(A) Overall survival according to the Bolondi’s classification. (B) Recurrence-free survival according to the Bolondi’s classification. (C) Overall survival according to the modified Bolondi’s classification (Kinki criteria). (D) Recurrence-free survival according to the modified Bolondi’s classification (Kinki criteria).
crt-2018-038f2.jpg
Table 1.
Proposed subclassification of BCLC-B patients published
Subclassification B1 B2 B3 B4
Child-Pugh points 5-6-7 5-6 7 8-9
Beyond Milan and within Up-to-Seven criteria In Out Out Out
ECOG (tumour-related) PST 0 0 0 0-1
Portal vein thrombosis No No No No

BCLC, Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; PST, performance status test.

Table 2.
Main clinical characteristics of patients
Variable All (n=1,103) BCLC-A (n=530) BCLC-B (n=219)
BCLC-C (n=354)
BCLC-B1 (n=41) BCLC-B2 (n=160) BCLC-B3 (n=11) BCLC-B4 (n=7)
Sex
 Male 970 444 39 148 11 5 323
 Female 133 86 2 12 0 2 31
Age (yr)
 < 50 521 251 17 75 2 2 174
 ≥ 50 582 279 24 85 9 5 180
PLT (×109/L)
 < 150 299 149 15 33 1 2 99
 ≥ 150 804 381 26 127 10 5 255
HBsAg
 Negative 157 89 3 19 1 1 44
 Positive 946 441 38 141 10 6 310
AFP (ng/mL)
 < 400 543 293 23 77 4 3 143
 ≥ 400 560 237 18 83 7 4 211
Capsulation
 Capsulated 812 421 36 131 9 7 208
 Noncapsulated 291 109 5 29 2 0 146
Lymphatic metastasis
 Absent 1,030 524 39 150 9 7 301
 Present 73 6 2 10 2 0 53
Tumor size (cm)
 < 5 385 249 41 19 1 4 71
 ≥ 5 718 281 0 141 10 3 283

BCLC, Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer; PLT, platelet; HBsAg, hepatitis B surface antigen; AFP, α-fetoprotein.

Table 3.
Multivariable regression results for overall survival and recurrence-free survival
Characteristic Overall survival
Recurrence-free survival
HR (95% CI) p-value HR (95% CI) p-value
Sex 0.56 (0.24-1.32) 0.184 0.36 (0.15-0.82) 0.015
Age 0.95 (0.62-1.45) 0.799 0.98 (0.68-1.42) 0.915
PLT 0.77 (0.47-1.24) 0.288 1.27 (0.82-1.97) 0.289
HBsAg 1.02 (0.53-1.93) 0.960 1.09 (0.63-1.89) 0.764
AFP 1.37 (0.88-2.11) 0.160 1.44 (0.99-2.08) 0.052
Capsulation 1.51 (0.90-2.55) 0.120 1.11 (0.70-1.77) 0.643
Bolondi’s subclassification 1.31 (0.82-2.10) 0.263 0.97 (0.65-1.46) 0.892
Lymphatic metastasis 2.01 (0.81-4.98) 0.131 1.49 (0.70-3.20) 0.299
Tumor size 2.74 (1.58-4.74) < 0.001 2.31 (1.42-3.74) 0.001

HR, hazard ratio; CI, confidence interval; PLT, platelet; HBsAg, hepatitis B surface antigen; AFP, α-fetoprotein.

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