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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This article reviews the disease process
hemochromatosis
, which is now recognized as one of the most common genetic disorders. Hemochromatosis is transmitted as autosomal recessive, and occurs in 3% of persons of Anglo-Saxon descent. It is caused by an inappropriate increase in intestinal iron absorption resulting in deposition of excess iron in tissues. Hemochromatosis usually presents in males in their 40s, and females much later. The most frequent initial symptoms are weakness, lassitude, weight loss, and symptoms related to the onset of diabetes mellitus. The classical triad of cirrhosis, diabetes mellitus, and skin pigmentation occurs late in the disease. There is debate over the value of mass screening for the disorder; however, it is recommended that once a case has been identified family members at risk should be screened. Therapy is directed at removing excess iron by phlebotomy. By instituting early therapy, many of the long-term complications, including cirrhosis and
hepatoma
, can be prevented. It is imperative that physicians learn to recognize early signs and symptoms of
hemochromatosis
so that treated patients can expect a normal life span with minimal medical intervention.
...
PMID:Recognizing genetic hemochromatosis. 784 64
Cross-sectional imaging is playing an increasing role in diagnosis of diffuse liver diseases because it clarifies, in many cases, the overlap in clinical and laboratory manifestations often present in diffuse hepatic processes and thus may eliminate the need for a biopsy. Advances in cross-sectional imaging, particularly in magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, enable further characterization of hepatic parenchymal and architectural changes, allowing closer correlation with underlying pathologic changes. Advanced imaging techniques can be used to characterize a variety of metabolic, vascular, toxic, infectious, and neoplastic diffuse liver diseases. These include more common entities such as cirrhosis, Budd-Chiari syndrome,
hemochromatosis
, Wilson disease, fatty change, and diffuse neoplastic disease (
hepatocellular carcinoma
, metastasis, and lymphoma) and uncommon entities such as schistosomiasis, sarcoidosis, and amyloidosis. Correlation of computed tomographic and MR imaging findings with underlying pathologic features is helpful in understanding the gamut of diffuse diseases of the liver.
...
PMID:Diffuse disease of the liver: radiologic-pathologic correlation. 785 42
Sublobular nodules of hepatocytes free of iron or exhibiting much less iron than the surrounding parenchyma, referred to in this study as iron-free-foci, are frequently found in the livers of patients with genetic
hemochromatosis
complicated by
hepatocellular carcinoma
. To test the hypothesis that such nodules are preneoplastic lesions, iron-free foci were sought in the initial liver biopsy specimens of 185 patients with untreated and uncomplicated genetic
hemochromatosis
. Iron-free foci were found in 14 (7.6%) patients, all men, aged from 38 to 76 yr, with heavy iron overload and with fibrosis or cirrhosis. Twelve patients with iron-free foci were followed for 0.9 to 15 yr (7 +/- 6 yr). In six (50%),
HCC
developed, compared with 2 (8%) from a control group consisting of 24 patients without IFF matched according to age, sex, degree of fibrosis, liver iron amount and follow-up duration. The mean number of iron-free foci per iron-free foci-positive specimen was 3.2 +/- 2.1. Ten patients had dysplastic aspects in their iron-free foci, and four had intrahepatocytic iron-positive inclusions at the periphery of iron-free foci. Proliferative cell nuclear antigen was positive in 75% of iron-free foci and in 24% +/- 21% of hepatocyte nuclei in iron-free foci. This study clearly demonstrates that iron-free foci are proliferative lesions and strongly suggests that such nodules are preneoplastic foci. Therefore the finding of IFF in the initial liver biopsy specimen from a patient with genetic
hemochromatosis
should lead to regular screening for
hepatocellular carcinoma
.
...
PMID:Preneoplastic significance of hepatic iron-free foci in genetic hemochromatosis: a study of 185 patients. 790 16
Hereditary hemochromatosis is a prevalent inherited disorder with an estimated frequency of homozygosity of 0.2 to 0.45% in Caucasians. The disease is characterized by progressive iron overload until a massive accumulation of body iron occurs. Undetected, the disorder eventually can produce either cirrhosis, diabetes mellitus, cardiac disease, arthritis, or
hepatocellular carcinoma
or a combination of these manifestations. Early diagnosis and treatment prevents organ damage and normalizes life expectancy. Screening studies to detect
hemochromatosis
are most effectively accomplished by measurement of the serum iron and total iron binding capacity. Treatment is most effectively performed by frequent phlebotomy until body stores are empty and then 3 to 4 times yearly for life. The basic defect of
hemochromatosis
appears to increase iron absorption, decrease iron excretion, and produce preferential deposit of iron in hepatic parenchymal cells rather than Kupffer cells. The genetic abnormality of
hemochromatosis
is located on chromosome 6 in close association with the gene for HLA antigens. Recent speculation postulates that tumor necrosis factor may be involved in the etiology of this disease because of its location on chromosome 6 and its effect upon iron transport.
...
PMID:Hereditary hemochromatosis: a prevalent disorder of iron metabolism with an elusive etiology. 794 87
To identify factors that might be useful as prognostic indexes for the risk of
hepatocellular carcinoma
in Italian patients with genetic
hemochromatosis
, 152 homozygotes were studied prospectively for 1 to 229 mo. Factors that were considered in estimating the risk of developing
hepatocellular carcinoma
were age, sex, cirrhosis (Child class), HBsAg, antibodies to HBsAg, antibodies to HBcAg, hepatitis C antibodies, alcohol abuse and the amount of iron removed during therapeutic phlebotomy to produce iron depletion. At diagnosis, cirrhosis was present in 97 patients and absent in 55. During follow-up,
hepatocellular carcinoma
developed in 28 of the 97 patients with cirrhosis but in none of those without. Among patients with cirrhosis, the cumulative probability of being free of
hepatocellular carcinoma
at 10 yr was 70%. For patients with and without HBsAg the probabilities of being free of liver cancer at 10 yr were, respectively, 54% and 75%; for those with and without history of alcoholism, 58% and 78%; and for those younger and older than 55 yr, 90% and 54%. In patients with cirrhosis, multivariate analysis using proportional-hazards (Cox) regression found that the only factors contributing significantly to the estimation of a prognostic index were age, presence of HBsAg and alcohol abuse. Age over 55 yr increased the relative risk of
hepatocellular carcinoma
13.3-fold (p < 0.001), the presence of HBsAg increased it 4.9-fold (p < 0.02) and alcohol abuse increased it 2.3-fold (p < 0.04).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Prognostic factors for hepatocellular carcinoma in genetic hemochromatosis. 798 40
We describe the establishment and characterization of a novel
hepatoma
cell line. This cell line, designated RBHF-1, was established from a
hepatocellular carcinoma
of a 67-yr-old man with a history of genetic
hemochromatosis
. At this writing, the cells have been maintained in RPMI-1640 tissue-culture medium and fetal calf serum without any additional supplements for 30 mo. The cells form colonies on soft agar and are not tumorigenic in nude mice. The cell line is polymorphic and displays characteristics of mature hepatocytes by synthesizing albumin, alpha 2-macroglobulin, fibronectin and alpha-fetoprotein. Cytogenetic analysis shows multiple chromosomal aberrations, with a consistent deletion in the long arm and deletions or rearrangements in the short arm of chromosome 1. There is no evidence for hepatitis B or hepatitis C virus infection of the cell line. The cells contain no detectable intracellular iron after staining with Perls' stain. Unlike other
hepatoma
cell lines, there is no detectable binding of epidermal growth factor to RBHF-1 cells. This is the first cell line to be established from a patient with
hemochromatosis
, and it provides a potentially important model for the study of hepatocyte transformation in association with iron overload.
...
PMID:Establishment of a cell line from a hepatocellular carcinoma from a patient with hemochromatosis. 802 Sep 7
During the period 1986-93 22 patients were diagnosed as having primary
hemochromatosis
. Only 11 of them had elevated aminotransferases. Transferrin saturation was higher > 63% in 17 (77%) and serum-ferritin was higher in all the patients. (257 mumol/l to 6,500 mumol/l). A percutaneous liver biopsy was performed in 20 patients, all of whom showed a characteristic grading from 2 + to 4+ using Perls' stain. Two males had cirrhosis with simultaneous
hepatocellular carcinoma
, and another two had cirrhosis. One patient had diabetes mellitus type I. We conclude that fasting serum-iron and transferrin should be determined in all subjects over 40 years of age and in patients with chronic elevation of liver enzymes. If transferrin saturation is higher than 50% in females and 60% in males, serum ferritin should be determined. A percutaneous liver biopsy should be performed if both values are higher than normal. Screening of siblings is important because of the autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance.
...
PMID:[Clinical experience with early hemochromatosis]. 807 82
From 1983 to 1992 we found in 50 patients a
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
). The diagnosis was confirmed by histology (n = 34), cytology (n = 4) or clinical symptoms together with ultrasound findings and laboratory signs. 41 of the tumors occurred in cirrhotic livers. 29 patients had singular tumors, 21 had multiple tumors or diffuse tumor spreading in the whole liver. The singular tumors ranged in size from 1.1 to 15 cm. 8 of these tumors were smaller than 3 cm in diameter. The sonomorphological tumor pattern was hyperechoic in 24 cases, 14 of them had a halo sign. 14 tumors were hypoechoic. In the 12 cases with a mixed sonomorphologic pattern, a mosaic of hyperechoic and hypoechoic areas seemed to be very characteristic. Biopsies of the different parts of such a tumor in 1 patient showed different degrees of fat. By color Doppler-sonography, in 8 of 12 investigated patients an increased tumor perfusion was detected. In conclusion,
HCC
has different sonomorphologic patterns. The so-called mosaic pattern is characteristic, but rare. A focal lesion in a cirrhotic liver is highly suspicious for
HCC
. Ultrasound is effective as a screening method for risk groups with liver cirrhosis,
hemochromatosis
or chronic hepatitis.
...
PMID:[Ultrasound diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma]. 838 61
The relative risk of primary
hepatocellular carcinoma
in genetic
hemochromatosis
(GH) is estimated at over 200 times as that of control populations. Recently, ferric ion chelated to citrate (Fe-citrate) was identified as the major non-transferrin-bound iron in the serum of GH patients. We investigated whether low concentration of Fe-citrate plus reductant could damage supercoiled plasmid DNA under physiological pH and ionic strength. Incubation of Fe-citrate with either H2O2, L-ascorbate, or L-cysteine induced single- and double-strand breaks in supercoiled plasmid pZ189 in a concentration- and time-dependent fashion. DNA strand breaks produced by Fe-citrate plus H2O2 increased at reduced pH (< or = 6.9). Catalase and free radical scavengers inhibited the DNA breakage produced by Fe-citrate in combination with each reductant, suggesting that H2O2 and finally .OH are responsible DNA damaging species. The catalytic ability of Fe-citrate to induce DNA strand breaks, particularly double-strand breaks (DSBs), may contribute to the carcinogenic processes observed in GH.
...
PMID:Induction of oxidative single- and double-strand breaks in DNA by ferric citrate. 839 39
Hereditary Hemochromatosis (HFE) is one of the most common inherited disorders with an estimated frequency of homozygous patients of 0.002-0.0045. The disease is characterized by increased intestinal iron absorption and progressive iron overload. Affected subjects show clinical symptoms of parenchymal organ damage after the third-fourth decade of life and have a 200 fold increased risk of developing
hepatocellular carcinoma
. Early diagnosis and treatment prevent complications and may normalize life expectancy of patients. The biochemical and genetic defects leading to progressive iron accumulation are still unknown, but the HFE gene is tightly linked to HLA complex on the short arm of chromosome 6. Utilizing HLA serotypes and the study of several polymorphic markers of 6p21, a linkage analysis of the disease locus was performed in a series of Italian
hemochromatosis
families. The data obtained by linkage analysis and the study of a family with a double recombinant allowed us to better define the HFE gene location with respect to HLA-class I A and F loci.
...
PMID:Linkage analysis of 6p21 polymorphic markers and the hereditary hemochromatosis: localization of the gene centromeric to HLA-F. 851 96
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