HBP Surgery Week 2022

Details

[Oral Presentation 3 - Liver (Transplantation)]

[OP 3-5] Circulating tumour cells and their impact on the management of the liver transplant patient with hepatocellular carcinoma
Felipe ALCONCHEL*1 , Francisco VILLALBA1 , Luis S핬NZ1 , Mar? Isabel S핹CHEZ1 , David FERRERAS1 , Pedro CASCALES1 , Francisco S핹CHEZ-BUENO1 , Ricardo ROBLES1 , Pablo RAM?EZ1re
1 Surgery And Organ Transplantation, Virgen De La Arrixaca University Hospital (IMIB), SPAIN

Background : For hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), liver transplantation (LT) is considered a curative treatment, however, more than 10% of transplant recipients have recurrences within the first year. This suggests the existence of circulating- tumor-cells (CTC) that spread from a primary tumor and travel to peripheral blood and distant organs. Their detection and monitoring could be of great clinical value to an early prediction of recurrence as a real-time liquid biopsy. The aim of this study is to determine the relationship between CTC and clinicopathological variables and to compare the CTC-levels in patients with HCC before transplantation and at one and two years after surgery.

Methods : Peripheral blood was obtained from 34 patients with HCC included in the LT list. Immunomagnetic isolation of CTC was performed by the IsoFlux?System. Cell enrichment was stained with anti-CK, Hoechst-33342 and antiCD45, performing cell counting under a fluorescence microscope. The clinicopathological variables (number of tumors, vascular invasion, tumor necrosis and recurrence) were collected. Spearman's rho, Mann-Whitney and Wilcoxon test were used.

Results : We found statistically significant differences in the CTC-levels between patients with vascular invasion and those without (U=0; p=0.005) such that patients with vascular invasion had median levels of 539 CTC/10 mL (IR: 448- 1768) and those without vascular invasion had median levels of 3 CTC/10 mL (IR:0-31.25). Also we found a statistically significant decrease in post-transplant CTC-values at one year (Z= -2.672/ p=0.008) and two years (Z= -2.218/ p=0.027).

Conclusions : The median CTC-levels of the patients included in the study showed a downward trend after liver transplantation. Also, a significant difference was found in the levels of pre-transplant-CTC between patients with and without vascular invasion, these levels being significantly higher in patients with vascular invasion compared to those without vascular invasion. Detection of CTC may have a useful clinical implication in predicting the evolution of HCC after LT.



HBP 2022_OP_3_5.pdf
SESSION
Oral Presentation 3
Room A 3/4/2022 10:10 AM - 11:00 AM