Ikeda Kenji, Arase Yasuji, Kobayashi Masahiro, Someya Takashi, Hosaka Tetsuya, Saitoh Satoshi, Sezaki Hitomi, Akuta Norio, Suzuki Fumitaka, Suzuki Yoshiyuki, Kumada Hiromitsu
Department of Gastroenterology, Toranomon Hospital, Tokyo, and Okinaka Memorial Institute for Medical Research, Tokyo, Japan.
Intervirology. 2005;48(1):29-38. doi: 10.1159/000082092.
To elucidate the influence of serum hepatitis B virus (HBV) load on hepatocellular carcinogenesis in cirrhotic patients, HBV-DNA was sequentially measured. In a nested, case-control study using 96 patients without antiviral therapy, high HBV-DNA (> or =10(3.7) copies/ml) in the last 3 years was significantly associated with carcinogenesis (a patient group without hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development; 0/48 vs. a patient group with eventual HCC development; 22/48, p < 0.0001). No patient with a continuously low HBV-DNA for the last 3 years developed HCC. Persistence of high HBV-DNA concentration suggested an increased risk of carcinogenesis. In a retrospective cohort study using 57 patients with interferon therapy, HCC developed in 2 (8.0%) of the 25 patients with HBV-DNA loss, while carcinogenesis was found in 11 (34.4%) of 32 patients without HBV-DNA loss (Fisher's exact test, p = 0.026). A significant decrease or loss of serum HBV-DNA stops HCC development, and its sequential analysis could be very useful both in the prediction and early detection of small HCC.