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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) levels were studied in 51 consecutive patients with
hepatocellular carcinoma
that presented to the Surgical Hepatobiliary Unit at Westmead Hospital over 12 years. Twenty-three were hepatitis
surface antigen
(HBsAg) positive and 13 of those patients were Asian. Thirteen patients drank more than 60 g of alcohol each day. A significantly raised level of AFP was defined as more than 20 ng/mL, and 31 of the 51 patients had AFP levels exceeding this at some stage during surveillance. Twenty-five demonstrated levels above 200 ng/mL. Univariate statistical methods suggested that men were more likely to express raised AFP than women, Asians more likely than other races, patients with chronic active hepatitis more likely than those without and those with chronic hepatitis B infection more likely than those who were HBsAg negative. Those who drank more than 60 g alcohol each day were less likely to demonstrate a raised serum AFP than those who drank less. Multivariate logistic regression demonstrated that HBsAg carriage was the only statistically significant independent determinant of a raised AFP. Age 65 years or more was associated with a chance of a raised AFP.
...
PMID:Alpha-fetoprotein expression in hepatocellular carcinoma: a clinical study. 138 Dec 28
In Okinawa prefecture, prevalence of hepatitis B
surface antigen
(HBsAg) among blood donors is 3.5% and is twice as high as the average for the whole of Japan (1.5%), and is the highest in Japan (p less than 0.005). In contrast, mortality rates of both liver cirrhosis (LC) and primary liver cancer (PLC) in Okinawa are the lowest in Japan. Many epidemiological studies have shown that the positive rate of HBsAg correlates with mortality rate of PLC. To elucidate the cause of this epidemiological discrepancy, cross-sectional seroepidemiological studies and a prospective clinical study were conducted. In the cross-sectional studies, the following results were obtained; (1) Positive rate of HBsAg among patients with LC in Okinawa was 15.2% and lower than the average for the whole of Japan (23.4%). A similar comparison among patients with
hepatocellular carcinoma
showed 24.4% in Okinawa Vs. 31.4% in the whole of Japan. (2) The age-specific hepatitis B e antigen positive rate among 829 HBsAg positive health examinees tend to decrease with increase in age; 50% in less than 20 years old age group, 15.7% in third decade and 2-3% or less in 30 or more age group. Of the 829, 431 HBsAg positive subjects were referred our liver out-patient clinic. Then, of the 431, 27 (6.3%) were diagnosed or suspected as having chronic hepatitis and one (0.2%) was diagnosed as having cirrhosis. Of the 431, 381 (88.4%) were diagnosed as healthy HBsAg carrier, the great majority (94.0%) of whom had positive reaction of anti-HBe antibody and normal values of both GOT and GPT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Correlation between hepatitis B virus infection and chronic liver disease in Okinawa]. 140 58
Survival rates were calculated for 251 patients with cirrhosis of the liver but without
hepatocellular carcinoma
, primary biliary cirrhosis, or autoimmune cirrhosis who underwent laparoscopy during the past 21 years at the authors' hospital. The survival rates were calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method. Stored serum was assayed for hepatitis B
surface antigen
(HBsAg) and antibodies to the hepatitis C virus (HCV). Patients with alcoholic cirrhosis had significantly better survival rates than patients with HBsAg, HCV, or both. Differences in survival rates between patients with hepatitis B and C were insignificant. In both groups, habitual drinkers had a significantly lower survival rate. The results suggested that alcohol accelerates liver damage in subjects with viral hepatitis.
...
PMID:Effect of drinking on the outcome of cirrhosis in patients with hepatitis B or C. 161 Oct 14
Potential risk factors for
hepatocellular carcinoma
were investigated in a case-control study among inhabitants of north east Thailand. Sixty-five cases from 3 hospitals, with matched controls, were included. Infection with hepatitis-B virus was the major risk factor-chronic carriers of HB
surface antigen
had an estimated relative risk of 15.2. Infection with hepatitis-C virus appeared to be rare. No increase in risk was found with recent aflatoxin intake, as estimated by consumption of possibly contaminated foods, or by measuring aflatoxin-albumin adducts in serum. Regular use of alcohol (2 or more glasses of spirits per week) was associated with a non-significant elevation in risk (o.r. = 3.4, 95% c.i. 0.8-14.6), but the number of regular drinkers in the population was small. The meaning of an apparent protection conferred by certain food items is uncertain, but a possible role of betel nut in the aetiology deserves further investigation.
...
PMID:Liver cancer in Thailand. II. A case-control study of hepatocellular carcinoma. 164 98
During studies of seasonal obesity, a high frequency of hepatic neoplasms was observed in Richardson's ground squirrels. Of 12 Richardson's ground squirrels examined thoroughly, 7 had mild or moderate degrees of chronic portal hepatitis and 6 (50%) had
hepatocellular carcinoma
. Serological tests for hepadnavirus
surface antigen
, anti-core antibody and virion DNA that recognize the ground squirrel hepatitis virus of California ground squirrels (Spermophilus beecheyi) were uniformly negative. Southern blot analyses of EcoRI digests of liver cell DNA demonstrated 3.2 kb fragments that hybridized with a ground squirrel hepatitis virus-specific probe in nontumorous liver tissue from 6 of 10 ground squirrels and in
hepatocellular carcinoma
specimens from 2 of 5 squirrels indicating infection with a hepadnavirus related to ground squirrel hepatitis virus. Failure, however, to detect serum antibody to ground squirrel hepatitis core antigen suggested probable antigenic differences between the ground squirrel hepatitis virus of California ground squirrels and the putative Richardson's ground squirrel agent. Further studies are required to fully characterize the hepadnavirus of Richardson's ground squirrels and to determine its relationship to hepatocarcinogenesis in this species.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma in Richardson's ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii): evidence for association with hepatitis B-like virus infection. 164 62
A questionnaire-based survey involving 11,801 hemophiliacs from 54 hemophilia centers in the USA and Europe documented the occurrence of
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) in 10 patients. The crude rate of
HCC
was 3.2/100,000 patients/year, at least 30 times higher than the background incidence of this tumor in the countries of origin of the patients. All patients were Caucasians with hemophilia A, 39 to 74 years of age, and had liver cirrhosis. All had one or more risk factor for cirrhosis and
HCC
: 5 were positive for serum hepatitis B
surface antigen
, 4 had the antibody to hepatitis C virus, and 4 had histories of alcohol abuse. Serum alpha-fetoprotein, measured in 6 patients, was significantly elevated in 4 (range: 807-1399 ng/ml), and only moderately elevated in 2 (25 and 171 ng/ml). The onset of
HCC
was asymptomatic in 5 patients, whereas it was accompanied by jaundice, abdominal pain, or ascites in the remaining patients. Thus,
HCC
seems to be a more important secondary disease for hemophiliacs than formerly recognized. Since
HCC
is often asymptomatic, screening hemophiliacs with chronic liver disease with periodic ultrasound scans might increase the changes of detecting
HCC
at a stage amenable to surgical treatment.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma in hemophilia. 165 Jan 34
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the major etiologic agent of parenterally transmitted non-A, non-B hepatitis. To determine whether there is a relationship between this virus agent and
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
), the sera of patients with
HCC
and chronic hepatitis were assessed using a sensitive immunoassay for HCV antibody. Anti-HCV was detected in 65% of 132 patients with
HCC
, without any relationship with the presence of the hepatitis B
surface antigen
(HBsAg). The prevalence (74%) of anti-HCV was high, as expected in patients with putative non-A, non-B cirrhosis also. The prevalence of anti-HCV was less in patients with HBsAg-positive cirrhosis (28%) and in patients with disease not related to viral hepatitis and healthy controls (8%). These data suggest, but do not prove, that HCV is an important factor associated with
HCC
.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C antibody in patients with chronic liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma. 165 Jun 89
A detailed mutational analysis of the regulatory DNA sequence elements that control expression of the hepatitis B virus major
surface antigen
gene was performed in the human
hepatoma
cell lines HepG2.1 and Huh7, using transient transfection assays. Seven regions (A to G) of the major
surface antigen
promoter located within 200 nucleotides of the RNA initiation site have been identified which influence the level of transcription from this promoter. The three distal regions (A to C), located between -188 and -68, appear to possess a level of redundancy in their ability to influence the transcriptional activity from the major
surface antigen
promoter. The simultaneous deletion of regions A, B, and C resulted in an approximately fourfold reduction in transcription from the major
surface antigen
promoter. Region D, located between -67 and -49, is an essential element of the major
surface antigen
promoter. The three proximal regions (E to G) are located within 45 nucleotides of the major transcription initiation site. Region E prevents the negative influence of region F and can compensate for the effect of mutation of region G on transcription from the major
surface antigen
promoter. Region G can compensate for the effect of the loss of a functional region E sequence on the transcriptional activity of the major
surface antigen
promoter only in the absence of a functional region F sequence. These results imply that the level of expression of the major
surface antigen
gene is controlled by the complex interplay between a minimum of six transcription factors which activate and one transcription factor which represses transcription from this gene.
...
PMID:Complex regulation of transcription from the hepatitis B virus major surface antigen promoter in human hepatoma cell lines. 165 7
To assess the contribution of the recently identified hepatitis C virus to chronic liver diseases of unknown cause and chronic hepatitis attributed by exclusion to non-A, non-B hepatitis, we tested for antibody to hepatitis C in hepatitis B
surface antigen
-negative patients with a spectrum of chronic liver diseases. Antibody to hepatitis C virus, a marker of hepatitis C infection, was detected with a first-generation radioimmunoassay at the following frequencies in the following patient groups: 69% of transfusion-associated non-A, non-B hepatitis; 53% of non-transfusion-associated non-A, non-B hepatitis; 26% of hepatitis B
surface antigen
-negative
hepatocellular carcinoma
; 8% of cryptogenic cirrhosis; 5% to 7% of autoimmune chronic liver diseases; 19% of patients with miscellaneous types of chronic liver disease; and 0.67% of healthy controls. Among non-transfusion-associated cases, 81% with a history of intravenous drug use but only 18% with occupational exposure as health workers had antibody to hepatitis C virus. Among cases of
hepatocellular carcinoma
, 63% of Japanese patients but only 11% of American patients had evidence of hepatitis C infection. Comparison in a subgroup of 79 serum samples of a second-generation radioimmunoassay with the first-generation assay demonstrated a 12% increase in antibody frequency from 30% to 42%. We conclude that hepatitis C plays a substantial role in transfusion-associated and non-transfusion-associated non-A, non-B hepatitis as well as in
hepatocellular carcinoma
, especially in Japan, a limited role in cryptogenic cirrhosis, and essentially no role in autoimmune chronic liver diseases. Application of more sensitive immunoassays will increase the frequency of antibody seropositivity in all subgroups, but relative distinctions among risk groups are likely to remain.
...
PMID:Role of hepatitis C virus in non-B chronic liver disease. 165 89
The prevalence of antibody to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) was investigated in patients with
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
), and correlated with the clinical features. Anti-HCV was detected in 129 histology or aspiration cytology proven
HCC
patients and 54 healthy controls. Anti-HCV was examined by the HCV EIA (Abbott Laboratories). All healthy controls were anti-HCV-negative. Nineteen of 81 (23.5%) hepatitis B
surface antigen
(HBsAg)-positive
HCC
patients were positive for anti-HCV. Anti-HCV was found among 60.4% (29/48) of
HCC
patients without detectable HB-sAg. Forty-eight of 129 (37.2%)
HCC
patients were positive for anti-HCV. There was a significant difference in the prevalence of anti-HCV between patients with HBsAg (23.5%) and those without HBsAg (60.4%, P = 0.0001). However, irrespective of the status of HBsAg, there was no statistical difference in sex, age, routine liver function tests, alpha-fetoprotein concentration, or associated cirrhosis between patients with anti-HCV and those without. The results imply that hepatitis C virus may play a role in the pathogenesis of
HCC
.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C virus antibody in hepatocellular carcinoma in Taiwan. 165 8
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