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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (hepatocellular carcinoma)
71,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether hepatitis C virus plays any role in the development of hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhotic patients. The role of age, sex, alcohol abuse, and infection by other hepatitic viruses, such as hepatitis B and Delta viruses, was also assessed. We found that mean age and male/female ratio were significantly higher in patients with HCC plus liver cirrhosis than in those with liver cirrhosis alone. Also, the prevalence of HCV infection was found to be higher in HCC patients compared to cirrhotics. Further, by means of multiple logistic regression, we evaluated the independent role of each variable in the development of HCC. Age, male sex, and to a lesser degree, HCV infection, as assessed by anti-HCV positivity, were the only risk factors which significantly correlated with the development of HCC. Moreover, when age and sex were excluded from the statistical model, HCV infection, but not HBV, HDV, and alcohol abuse, appeared to be associated with HCC. In conclusion, based on these data, age and male sex are the most important factors for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhotic patients. Hepatitis C virus, at least in the Mediterranean area, may play a role as an additive risk factor of HCC in patients suffering from liver cirrhosis.
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PMID:Hepatitis C virus infection is an additive risk factor for development of hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with cirrhosis. 165 21

Experimental and epidemiological studies of risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC): cirrhosis, male sex, oral contraceptives, alcohol, smoking, and aflatoxins, are evaluated, with meta-analysis for oral contraceptives, alcohol, and smoking. It is likely that an initiating event and one or more promoting events interact, probably with prolonged inflammation, necrosis and regeneration, to cause cancer in several types of cirrhosis. Over 90% of HCC patients have cirrhosis, usually from hepatitis B virus. The viral post-necrotic liver is often chronically dysplastic, but other types of cirrhosis are associated with HCC if they endure long enough. The proportion of men with HCC increases as hepatitis progressors to cirrhosis and then to HCC. Meta-analyses of 3 oral contraceptive studies resulted in a risk of 2.8 for 8 years of use, but 9.9 for 8 years. Population studies do not show any concentration of HCC in countries with high pill use, so the rarity of this cancer may have biased the results. Large epidemiologic studies are needed to refine risk estimates for oral contraceptives and HCC. Alcohol abuse of 80 g/day gives a risk of about 1.65 in pooled studies, compared to a risk of 1.1 for 80 g/day. Smoking gives a risk of 1.9, but there is no evidence for a secular trend by country in proportion to dose, as is evident for lung cancer. There is good experimental evidence that aflatoxin acts as an initiator for liver cancer, but there is not practical way to judge exposure for clinical studies.
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PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma: risk factors other than HBV. 166 Mar 33

This study of hepatocellular carcinoma in a homogeneous rural Transkeian population at high risk consisted of: evaluation of liver biopsies of 246 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma using routine histology and immunoperoxidase for HBV stains; collection of reliable data on alcohol consumption, blood HBsAg and ALT status in asymptomatic controls from an adequate population sample; assessment of maize intended for human consumption for contamination by carcinogenic fungi. Tumour histology of rural Blacks did not differ from those described in other studies. Cirrhotic livers were present in 45.1% and iron overload in 68% of cases. Tissue HBsAg was detected in 57% (45% of non-cirrhotic and 59% of cirrhotic livers). Asymptomatic controls showed 9.5% of HBsAg positivity, 3.5% had elevated ALT and 41.3% admitted to alcohol abuse. Maize had insignificant contamination by Aspergillus flavus and very frequent contamination by Fusarium moniloforme. This study suggests a multifactorial aetiology of hepatocellular carcinoma, with viral infection being of the most importance.
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PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma in a rural population at risk. 166 22

gamma-Glutamyltransferase [GGT; (5-glutamyl)-peptide:amino-acid 5-glutamyltransferase, EC 2.3.2.2] is a glutathione-metabolizing enzyme, whose activity variations in serum and organs are valuable markers of preneoplastic processes, alcohol abuse, and induction by xenobiotics. To elucidate the implication of GGT in various metabolic pathways, we established a stable transgenic V79 cell line, highly producing the human GGT. A full-length cDNA, encoding the human hepatoma HepG2 GGT, was subcloned in an expression vector under the control of the simian virus 40 early promoter and was used to transfect V79 cells. We selected a cell line exhibiting a GGT activity of 2 units per mg of protein, the highest GGT expression level reported to date. As described for the human kidney and liver enzymes, the recombinant GGT purified from this cell line showed a heterodimeric structure. Its two subunits existed as sialylated and differentially glycosylated isoforms, with mean molecular masses of 80 and 29 kDa. However, catalytic features were found to be identical to those of human serum and HepG2 GGTs. The newly engineered cell line thus should be useful for the production of human GGT and as a potential alternative model for pharmacological studies.
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PMID:High-level expression of enzymatically active mature human gamma-glutamyltransferase in transgenic V79 Chinese hamster cells. 167 21

From June 1981 to June 1989 we diagnosed 174 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) at our institution (Piacenza, Northern Italy). Average age was 65.6 years; male to female ratio 3.4. 149 patients were cirrhotic (85.6%); alcohol abuse was present in 88/169 (52.1%); in 53/145 patients all hepatitis B virus markers were negative. Alpha-fetoprotein showed a low diagnostic sensitivity (values above 500 ng only in 49/169 or 29.0%). We used ultrasound (US) examination with a very high identification rate in all cases; pathological diagnosis was achieved by US guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy in 135 patients; in 13, by laparoscopy-histology. Metastases were found in 24/169 cases (14.2%); a second malignancy was diagnosed in 13/169 (7.7%): the most common association was HCC-non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Only 14 patients could be referred to surgery, which significantly improved prognosis.
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PMID:Diagnostic aspects and follow-up of 174 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma. Second report. 170 84

The reports of 26,879 autopsies performed at the Institute of Pathological Anatomy at the University of Trieste during 1876-85 (70% of all deaths that occurred in the Province) were examined, and 2563 cases of liver cirrhosis were found. Analysis of the sample allowed us to make the following conclusions: (i) The prevalence of cirrhosis at autopsy is high in Trieste and shows no tendency to decrease, as has been inferred by some clinical studies. (ii) The increasing average age at death over the decade studied appears to be unrelated to the new, early treatments adopted for hepatopathic patients, since a similar yearly increase in mean age at death was seen for the whole population of the Province. The combination of a high incidence of cirrhosis and increasing average age of patients will probably result in an increasing occurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma. (iii) The observed male:female ratio (2.3) is analogous to that of alcohol drinkers in the Province and thus suggests a role of alcohol abuse in the development of cirrhosis. The distribution of markers of hepatitis B virus in the population of Trieste, which is very similar in the two sexes, supports this hypothesis.
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PMID:Occurrence of liver cirrhosis among autopsies in Trieste. 185 48

HDL-subfraction was studied in blood serum of drinkers after alcohol intake and control group of men-nondrinkers. Blood serum incubation with fibroblasts culture did not indicate principal differences between drinkers and nondrinkers both with normolipemia and hyperalphacholesterolemia. Increase of HDL2 and decrease of HDL3-subfraction were observed. Incubation of the same species with hepatoma cells culture (Hep G-2) demonstrated significant differences between normolipemia and hyperalphacholesterolemia. The reduction of HDL2 subfraction level and increase of HDL3 have been found in nondrinkers with normolipemia. The raise of HDL2 was demonstrated in hyperalphacholesterolemia (due to HDL2b and HDL2a in drinkers and HDL2a in nondrinkers). Besides, in several samples of normolipidemic blood serum taken after alcohol abuse the changes of HDL-subfractions were identical to those receiving in hyperalphacholesterolemia. It is postulated that one of the mechanisms of the alcoholic hyperalphacholesterolemia development is the decline of the transfer rate of cholesterol ethers to the liver and accumulation of HDL2 particles in total HDL pool.
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PMID:[Effects of recent alcohol intake on high density lipoprotein accepting properties and their interactions with liver cells]. 196 13

Always take a full travel, drug and contact history in any patient presenting with jaundice. All drugs should be suspected as potential hepatotoxins. With hepatitis A the presence of IgM antibodies reflects recent infection, and IgG antibody indicates past infection and lifelong immunity. There is no chronic carrier state of hepatitis A and E. All patients with jaundice should be tested for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg). Hepatitis B infection is usually benign and short lived, but it can be fatal if chronic hepatitis develops, which may lead later to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Up to 5 to 10 per cent of patients with hepatitis B will become chronic carriers (especially drug addicts and homosexuals). Such carriers are identified by persistent titres of HBsAg and possibly HBeAg, the latter indicating the presence of the whole virus and active replication and high infectivity. A raised gamma glutamyl transferase accompanied by a raised MCV is a good screening test for alcohol abuse.
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PMID:Jaundice. 204 97

Antibodies against hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) were detected in 60.8% of 78 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Cirrhosis, present in most of the patients, as well as alcohol abuse, age, sex, and alpha-fetoprotein were equally distributed in the anti-HCV-positive and -negative groups. HBsAg positivity was significatively higher in negative anti-HCV group. By contrast, hepatitis B virus (HBV) antibodies were detected more frequently in positive anti-HCV patients than in the negative anti-HCV group. These data must be considered with caution because of the small number of HBsAg-positive patients. It is concluded that the high prevalence of anti-HCV in patients with HCC may suggest an etiological role of the hepatitis C virus, although in relationship to age, alcohol abuse and cirrhosis, the similarity in the two groups questions this hypothesis.
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PMID:Serum antibodies to hepatitis C virus in Italian patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. 216 May 17

During the past 8 years, estrogen receptors (ERs) in the cytosol of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) were assayed in 66 unselected patients without preceding treatments on whom radical hepatic resection was performed. Twenty-six patients had ERs of 0.9 to 13.4 fmol/mg protein with a mean dissociation constant of 7.8 x 10(-10) M. The remaining 40 patients had no detectable amount of the receptor. There were no substantial differences between the ER-positive and ER-negative groups in preoperative clinical and laboratory data such as sex, age, alcohol abuse, underlying liver disease, and hepatic functions. Large tumors were more common in the ER-negative group and therefore the incidence of major hepatic resection was significantly higher in this group. Histopathologic studies revealed no substantial differences between the two groups. Operative mortality rate was 11.5% in the ER-positive and 12.5% in the ER-negative group. Excluding eight operative deaths, the rate of tumor recurrence in the residual liver and long-term survival rate were identical for the two study groups. The current results may indicate that the presence or absence of ERs in human HCC does not correlate to either biologic or pathologic characteristics of this tumor, but the true role of ERs in human HCC remains to be elucidated.
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PMID:Clinicopathologic comparisons between estrogen receptor-positive and -negative hepatocellular carcinomas. 216 86


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