Review
Copyright ©2009 Baishideng.
World J Hepatol. Oct 31, 2009; 1(1): 48-61
Published online Oct 31, 2009. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v1.i1.48
Table 1 At risk population for HCC surveillance: AASLD guide lines[21]
Hepatitis B carriers
Asian males 40 years or more
Asian females 50 years or more
All cirrhotic hepatitis B carriers
Family history of HCC
Africans over age 20
For non-cirrhotic hepatitis B carriers not listed above the risk of HCC varies depending on the severity of the underlying liver disease, and current and past hepatic inflammatory activity. Patients with high HBV DNA concentrations and those with ongoing hepatic inflammatory activity remain at risk for HCC
Non-hepatitis B cirrhosis
Hepatitis C
Alcoholic cirrhosis
Genetic hemochromatosis
Primary biliary cirrhosis
Group with lack of evidence. Although the following groups have an increased risk of HCC no recommendations for or against surveillance can be made because a lack of data precludes an assessment of whether surveillance would be beneficial: a1-antitrypsin deficiency, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, autoimmune hepatitis
Table 2 Overall sensitivity, specificity and predictive value of imaging technique for the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma
StudyNunber of patients (n)HCC patients/ HCC instancesGold standard referenceImaging techniqueSensitivity (%)Specificity (%)PPV (%)Ref.
Ward et al (2000)14525/76Explant/MR (SPIO)66NANA[72]
biopsyMR (Double)80NA93.5
Rode et al (2001)4318/13ExplantSDCT53.892.994.3[58]
MR (Gd)76.957.142.3
Krinsky et al (2001)7110/19ExplantMR (Gd)53NA96.9[69]
Krinsky et al (2002)2424/> 118ExplantMR (Gd)33NANA[70]
De Ledingen et al (2002)3421/54ExplantMDCT51.984.6 pts289.5[55]
MR (Gd)61.11002100
Libbrecht et al (2002)4917/77ExplantMDCT70 pts1822NA[57]
MR (Gd)501792NA
Zacherl et al (2002)2323/50ExplantMDCT75NA64[62]
Barthia et al (2003)3114/32ExplantMR (Double)78NANA[31]
Burrell et al (2003)5029/76ExplantMDCT61NA87[3]
MR (MRA)76NA90
Teefey et al (2003)3229/18ExplantMDCT57-67 pts169-752NA[60]
MR (Gd)50-56163-812NA
Battakiarjya et al (2004)3030/46ExplantMDCT67.478.9NA[53]
IOCT6888.6NA
Kim et al (2004)2727/50Biopsy/clinical/radiologicalMR (Gd)91.3NA92.6[68]
MR (SPIO)77.3NANA
Valls et al (2004)8551/85ExplantMDCT78.8 ptsNA88[61]
Kim et al (2006)4631/53Biopsy/clinical/radiologicalMDCT77.4-79.2NA95-97[56]
MR (Gd)92.5-94.3NA92-96
Hecht et al (2006)3818/19ExplantMR (Gd)68.465.7NA[67]
Ronzoni et al (2007)8848/139ExplantMDCT64NA66.9[59]
73.3NA79
Lauenstein et al (2007)11527/36ExplantMR (Gd)77.8NANA[71]
Forner et al (2008)8960/60BiopsyMR (Gd)61.796.6NA[42]
CEUS51.793.1NA
Dai et al (2008)498NA/56Biopsy/MDCT80.497.9NA[52]
resectionCEUS91.187.2NA
Choi et al (2008)47/41ExplantMDCT65NANA[54]
MR (Gd)83NANA
Table 3 Newly found focal liver lesion in patients with cirrhosis. Screening and diagnosis: AASLD guide lines[21]
Focal lesion < 1 cm diameter: screen every 3-4 mo
Focal lesion 1-2 cm diameter: HCC diagnosed when 2 dynamic imaging techniques are concordant for HCC feature
Focal lesion > 2 cm diameter: HCC diagnosed with feature of HCC on 1 dynamic imaging technique
Table 4 Immunohistochemistry for HCC
MarkerStaining patternDiagnostic useDiagnostic valueRef.
AFPSpecific for HCC CytoplasmExpressed in HCC cells cytoplasm but also in: fetal liver, hepatoid tumors, germ cells tumorsSensitivity 17%-68%[89-104]
Specificity 97%
For HCC
GP-3Specific for HCC CytoplasmExpressed in HCC cell cytoplasm (less so if fibrolamellar or sarcomatoid variants) but also in: fetal liver, hepatoblastoma, melanomaSensitivity 49%-91%[81,109-115]
Specificity 89%-100%
For HCC
CD-34EndotheliumSurface of normal endothelium and HCC trabeculae or acini but also in: myelodysplasia in transformation, GI stromal tumors (high coexpression with bcl-2)HCC positivity 82%[117]
p-CEABiliary canaliculaIdentifies biliary glycoprotein 1 on hepatocyte canalicular pole and cholangiocyte. Useful for differential diagnosis vs cholangiocarcinoma, other adenocarcinomaHCC positivity 24%-90%[94,98,100,118-128]
CD-10Biliary canaliculaSurface of biliary tract cells and in HCC, but also positive in: B cell lymphomas, renal cells carcinoma, melanoma, prostate and pancreas adenocarcinoma. Useful for differential diagnosis vs cholangiocarcinoma, other adenocarcinomasHCC positivity 28%-86%[94,98,100,119,120,122-124,126,128]
Ki67 HepPar1Cell proliferation marker HCC & normal Hepatocyte citoplasmAssessing cell proliferation rate, correlates with tumor grade and clinical course. Useful to differentiate between HCC and hepatic adenomaHCC positivity rate 10%-50%[129]
Expressed in HCC and in normal liver cells, but also in hepatoblastoma. useful for differential diagnosis vs cholangiocarcinoma and metastasesHCC positivity 66%-100%[130-136]
CytokeratinsEpithelial cellsUseful for differential diagnosis vs cholangiocarcinoma. HCC profile: CK7/CK19/CK8/CK18 = - / - / + / +HCC positivity 76%-96%[97,101,104,137-140]