Geographical disparities of outcomes of hepatocellular carcinoma in France: the heavier burden of alcohol compared to hepatitis C

CE Costentin, P Sogni, B Falissard, JC Barbare… - Digestive diseases and …, 2020 - Springer
CE Costentin, P Sogni, B Falissard, JC Barbare, N Bendersky, O Farges, N Goutte
Digestive diseases and sciences, 2020Springer
Background Data on alcohol-related HCC are limited. Aims Our aim was to describe the
incidence, management, and prognosis of alcohol compared to Hepatitis C (HCV)-related
HCC at a national level. Methods Incident cases of HCC were identified in French
healthcare databases between 2009 and 2012 and analyzed retrospectively. Demographic
data, type, location, and annual HCC-caseload of the hospitals where patients were first
managed were retrieved. Survival of incident cases was computed from the time of …
Background
Data on alcohol-related HCC are limited.
Aims
Our aim was to describe the incidence, management, and prognosis of alcohol compared to Hepatitis C (HCV)-related HCC at a national level.
Methods
Incident cases of HCC were identified in French healthcare databases between 2009 and 2012 and analyzed retrospectively. Demographic data, type, location, and annual HCC-caseload of the hospitals where patients were first managed were retrieved. Survival of incident cases was computed from the time of diagnosis and adjusted for potential confounding variables.
Results
The study population included 14,060 incident cases of alcohol and 2581 HCV-related HCC. Alcohol-related HCC was more frequent than HCV-related HCC (29.37 and 5.39/100,000 adults/year, respectively) with an heterogeneous distribution on the French territory. The optimal treatment was less frequently curative (20.5% vs 35.9%; p < 0.001), and survival was significantly shorter (9.5 [9.0–10.0] versus 16.8 [15.5–18.7] months p < 0.001) in alcohol compared to HCV-related HCC, with marked variations between regions for a given risk factor. In multivariable analysis in the whole study population, curative treatment was a strong predictor of survival (adjusted HR 0.28 [0.27–0.30] months p < 0.001). Being managed at least once in a teaching hospital during follow-up was independently associated with receiving a curative treatment and survival.
Conclusion
In France, incidence of alcohol-related HCC is high and prognosis is poor compared to HCV-related HCC, with marked variations between regions. These results should guide future health policy initiatives pertaining to HCC care. Importantly, increasing patient’ referral in expert centers could increase chances to receive curative treatment and improve outcomes.
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