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A Grading System of Microvascular Invasion for Patients with Hepatocellular Carcinoma Undergoing Liver Resection with Curative Intent: A Multicenter Study

Han Wang, Junjie Chen, Shu‐Yi Yin, Xia Sheng, Hongxia Wang, Wan Yee Lau, Hui Dong, Wen‐Ming Cong

2024Journal of Hepatocellular Carcinoma20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Microvascular invasion (MVI) is closely correlated with poor clinical outcomes in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). A grading system of MVI is needed to assist in the management of HCC patient. Methods: Multicenter data of HCC patients who underwent liver resection with curative intent was analyzed. This grading system was established by detected number and distance from tumor boundary of MVI. Survival outcomes were compared among patients in each group. This system was verified by time-receiver operating characteristic curve, time-area under the curve, calibration curve, and decision curve analyses. Cox regression analysis was performed to study the associated factors of prognosis. Logistic analysis was used to study the predictive factors of MVI. Results: All patients were classified into 4 groups: M0: no MVI; M1: 1~5 proximal MVIs (≤1 cm from tumor boundary); M2a: >5 proximal MVIs (≤1 cm from tumor boundary); M2b: ≥1 distal MVIs (>1 cm from tumor boundary). The recurrence-free survival (RFS), overall survival (OS), and early RFS rates among all the individual groups were significantly different. Based on the number of proximal MVI (0~5 vs >5), patients in the M2b group were further divided into two subgroups which also showed different prognosis. Multiple methods showed this grading system to be significantly better than the MVI two-tiered system in prognostic evaluation. Four multivariate models for RFS, OS, early RFS, late RFS, and a predictive model of MVI were then established and were shown to satisfactorily evaluate prognosis and have a great discriminatory power, respectively. Conclusion: This MVI grading system could precisely evaluate prognosis of HCC patients after liver resection with curative intent and it could be employed in routine pathological reports. The severity of MVI from both adjacent and distant from tumor boundary should be stated. A hypothesis about two occurrence modes of distal MVI was proposed.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHepatocellular carcinomaReceiver operating characteristicGrading (engineering)Logistic regressionProportional hazards modelInternal medicineOncologySurvival analysisMultivariate analysisCarcinomaHepatectomyLiver cancerGastroenterologyArea under the curveRadiologySurgeryResectionEngineeringCivil engineeringHepatocellular Carcinoma Treatment and PrognosisColorectal Cancer Surgical TreatmentsInflammatory Biomarkers in Disease Prognosis