Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma in the Asia-Pacific region: Consensus statements

Among approximately 650 000 people who die from hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) each year, at least two-thirds live in Asia. Efforts to improve early diagnosis and treatment have not yet impacted mortality. An Asia-Pacific Working Party convened in Hong Kong in June 2008 to consider ways to prevent H...

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Main Authors: Farrell, G.C., Chan, H.L.Y., Yuen, M.F., Amarapurkar, D.N., Chutaputti, A., Fan, J.G., Hou, J.L., Han, K.H., Kao, J.H., Lim, S.G., Mohamed, R., Sollano, J., Ueno, Y., Prevent, Asai-Pacific Working Party
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Published: Blackwell Publishing 2010
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/14904/
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spelling my.um.eprints.149042017-07-08T06:57:42Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/14904/ Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma in the Asia-Pacific region: Consensus statements Farrell, G.C. Chan, H.L.Y. Yuen, M.F. Amarapurkar, D.N. Chutaputti, A. Fan, J.G. Hou, J.L. Han, K.H. Kao, J.H. Lim, S.G. Mohamed, R. Sollano, J. Ueno, Y. Prevent, Asai-Pacific Working Party R Medicine Among approximately 650 000 people who die from hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) each year, at least two-thirds live in Asia. Efforts to improve early diagnosis and treatment have not yet impacted mortality. An Asia-Pacific Working Party convened in Hong Kong in June 2008 to consider ways to prevent HCC in this region. Separate reviews have summarized epidemiology of HCC, preventive approaches related to hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV) and non-viral liver diseases, and the role of surveillance to detect HCC at a curative stage. We now present Consensus Statements from these deliberations and reviews. As chronic hepatitis B is the most common cause of HCC in Asia, effective hepatitis B vaccination programs are the most important strategy to reduce HCC incidence. Prevention of HCV by screening blood donors, universal precautions against blood contamination in health-care settings and reducing HCV transmission from injection drug use are also vital. There is strong evidence that effective antiviral therapy to control HBV infection or eradicate HCV substantially reduces (but does not abolish) HCC risk. With hemochromatosis, family screening, early diagnosis and correcting iron overload to prevent liver fibrosis prevents HCC. There is currently insufficient evidence to give firm recommendations on alcohol, obesity/metabolic risk factors and other liver diseases. HCC surveillance for high-risk groups is recommended in individual cases but cost-effectiveness is not as high as infant hepatitis B vaccination and screening blood for HCV. Widespread application of HCC surveillance in Asia-Pacific countries depends on economic factors and health-care priorities. Blackwell Publishing 2010 Article PeerReviewed Farrell, G.C. and Chan, H.L.Y. and Yuen, M.F. and Amarapurkar, D.N. and Chutaputti, A. and Fan, J.G. and Hou, J.L. and Han, K.H. and Kao, J.H. and Lim, S.G. and Mohamed, R. and Sollano, J. and Ueno, Y. and Prevent, Asai-Pacific Working Party (2010) Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma in the Asia-Pacific region: Consensus statements. Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 25 (4). pp. 657-663. ISSN 0815-9319
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Farrell, G.C.
Chan, H.L.Y.
Yuen, M.F.
Amarapurkar, D.N.
Chutaputti, A.
Fan, J.G.
Hou, J.L.
Han, K.H.
Kao, J.H.
Lim, S.G.
Mohamed, R.
Sollano, J.
Ueno, Y.
Prevent, Asai-Pacific Working Party
Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma in the Asia-Pacific region: Consensus statements
description Among approximately 650 000 people who die from hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) each year, at least two-thirds live in Asia. Efforts to improve early diagnosis and treatment have not yet impacted mortality. An Asia-Pacific Working Party convened in Hong Kong in June 2008 to consider ways to prevent HCC in this region. Separate reviews have summarized epidemiology of HCC, preventive approaches related to hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV) and non-viral liver diseases, and the role of surveillance to detect HCC at a curative stage. We now present Consensus Statements from these deliberations and reviews. As chronic hepatitis B is the most common cause of HCC in Asia, effective hepatitis B vaccination programs are the most important strategy to reduce HCC incidence. Prevention of HCV by screening blood donors, universal precautions against blood contamination in health-care settings and reducing HCV transmission from injection drug use are also vital. There is strong evidence that effective antiviral therapy to control HBV infection or eradicate HCV substantially reduces (but does not abolish) HCC risk. With hemochromatosis, family screening, early diagnosis and correcting iron overload to prevent liver fibrosis prevents HCC. There is currently insufficient evidence to give firm recommendations on alcohol, obesity/metabolic risk factors and other liver diseases. HCC surveillance for high-risk groups is recommended in individual cases but cost-effectiveness is not as high as infant hepatitis B vaccination and screening blood for HCV. Widespread application of HCC surveillance in Asia-Pacific countries depends on economic factors and health-care priorities.
format Article
author Farrell, G.C.
Chan, H.L.Y.
Yuen, M.F.
Amarapurkar, D.N.
Chutaputti, A.
Fan, J.G.
Hou, J.L.
Han, K.H.
Kao, J.H.
Lim, S.G.
Mohamed, R.
Sollano, J.
Ueno, Y.
Prevent, Asai-Pacific Working Party
author_facet Farrell, G.C.
Chan, H.L.Y.
Yuen, M.F.
Amarapurkar, D.N.
Chutaputti, A.
Fan, J.G.
Hou, J.L.
Han, K.H.
Kao, J.H.
Lim, S.G.
Mohamed, R.
Sollano, J.
Ueno, Y.
Prevent, Asai-Pacific Working Party
author_sort Farrell, G.C.
title Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma in the Asia-Pacific region: Consensus statements
title_short Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma in the Asia-Pacific region: Consensus statements
title_full Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma in the Asia-Pacific region: Consensus statements
title_fullStr Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma in the Asia-Pacific region: Consensus statements
title_full_unstemmed Prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma in the Asia-Pacific region: Consensus statements
title_sort prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma in the asia-pacific region: consensus statements
publisher Blackwell Publishing
publishDate 2010
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/14904/
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score 13.160551