Abstract

BackgroundMicrovascular invasion (MVI) is highly associated with poor prognosis in patients with liver cancer. Predicting MVI before surgery is helpful for surgeons to better make surgical plan. In this study, we aim at establishing a nomogram to preoperatively predict the occurrence of microvascular invasion in liver cancer.MethodA total of 405 patients with postoperative pathological reports who underwent curative hepatocellular carcinoma resection in the Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University from 2013 to 2015 were collected in this study. Among these patients, 290 were randomly assigned to the development group while others were assigned to the validation group. The MVI predictive factors were selected by Lasso regression analysis. Nomogram was established to preoperatively predict the MVI risk in HCC based on these predictive factors. The discrimination, calibration, and effectiveness of nomogram were evaluated by internal validation.ResultsLasso regression analysis revealed that discomfort of right upper abdomen, vascular invasion, lymph node metastases, unclear tumor boundary, tumor necrosis, tumor size, higher alkaline phosphatase were predictive MVI factors in HCC. The nomogram was established with the value of AUROC 0.757 (0.716–0.809) and 0.768 (0.703–0.814) in the development and the validation groups. Well-fitted calibration was in both development and validation groups. Decision curve analysis confirmed that the predictive model provided more benefit than treat all or none patients. The predictive model demonstrated sensitivity of 58.7%, specificity of 80.7% at the cut-off value of 0.312.ConclusionNomogram was established for predicting preoperative risk of MVI in HCC. Better treatment plans can be formulated according to the predicted results.

Highlights

  • Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the sixth most common cancer and ranks as the third tumor-related death in the world [1]

  • We aim at establishing a nomogram to preoperatively predict the occurrence of microvascular invasion in liver cancer

  • Lasso regression analysis revealed that discomfort of right upper abdomen, vascular invasion, lymph node metastases, unclear tumor boundary, tumor necrosis, tumor size, higher alkaline phosphatase were predictive microvascular invasion (MVI) factors in HCC

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the sixth most common cancer and ranks as the third tumor-related death in the world [1]. HCC can potentially be cured through resection or transplantation at early stage, most patients lost opportunities for curative surgical treatment because of liver dysfunction or disease extension [2]. Vascular invasion is one of the most crucial factors for poor prognosis after operation for HCC [4]. It can be divided into macrovascular invasion (vascular invasion) and microvascular invasion (MVI). The invasion of cancer cell nest in the endothelial vascular lumen is defined as MVI [5]. Microvascular invasion (MVI) is highly associated with poor prognosis in patients with liver cancer. We aim at establishing a nomogram to preoperatively predict the occurrence of microvascular invasion in liver cancer

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