Laparoscopic prediction of hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhosis patients

1997 
Previously, laparoscopic studies have not been successful in predicting the occurrence of small hepatocellular carcinoma because cirrhotic patients had not been separated into groups of those who developed small hepatocellular carcinoma under 3 cm in diameter, and those who did not. Retrospective examination with better separation of the two groups gave improved results. Of the 26 laparoscopic findings, only the presence of large complex regenerative nodules was closely associated with the occurrence of subclinical small hepatocellular carcinoma. The study of other cirrhotic patients with and without large complex regenerative nodules gave a cumulative hepatocellular carcinoma occurrence rate of 73% for patients who had these nodules by the third year after laparoscopy. In contrast, the rate for patients without such nodules was 6%, showing a significant difference (P < 0.05) between the two groups. We concluded that the laparoscopic finding of large complex regenerative nodules of liver cirrhosis can be used to predict the occurrence, or a complication, of subclinical small hepatocellular carcinoma.
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