From the Journals

NASH rapidly overtaking hepatitis C as cause of liver cancer


 

FROM THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL HEPATOLOGY


In terms of the effect on the prevalence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the modeling suggested cases of HCV-related liver cancer were predicted to peak at around 29,000 cases in 2015 then decline to fewer than 18,000 cases by 2025. In contrast, the prevalence of HCC from NASH is forecast to increase from between 5000 and 6000 cases in 2005 to 45,000 in 2025 by the conservative linear model or even as high as 106,000 cases according to the exponential model. It overtook HCV infection as a cause of liver cancer by around 2015.

“Despite the lack of existing data off of which to work, the general trends of our prediction models are consistent with the documented trends of liver transplant etiology, as well as 2010 insurance data indicating nonalcoholic fatty liver disease/NASH as the leading etiology associated with HCC,” wrote Osmanuddin Ahmed, MD, from the Rush University Medical Center in Chicago and his coauthors.

The study used liver transplant data as a proxy for the prevalence of hepatocellular carcinoma and also took into account the natural history of the disease. Between 5% and 20% of untreated HCV infections will go on to develop into cirrhosis, and of patients with HCV-related cirrhosis, around 15% will develop HCC within 10 years. In the case of NASH, the authors cited research suggesting that around 35% of patients go on to develop progressive fibrosis, that progression to cirrhosis takes around 29 years, and that the risk of progression to HCC ranged from 2.4% over 7 years to 12.8% over 3 years.

“A higher proportion of patients with NASH develop cirrhosis, but of those who develop cirrhosis, the probability of developing HCC is higher in patients with HCV,” the authors wrote. “In contrast, HCV progression to HCC rarely occurs in noncirrhotic patients.”

The authors wrote that it was important to explore projected trends in the etiology of hepatocellular carcinoma to inform the development of screening, diagnostic, and treatment approaches, particularly given potential differences in the pathology, natural history, and treatment options for NASH-related and HCV-related liver cancer.

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