Abstract

The poor prognosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is partly the result of the high rate of recurrence that is caused either by intrahepatic metastasis (IM) or independent multicentric occurrence (MO). For convenience, discrimination of IM and MO is based on pathological findings, but reliable parameters are not sufficiently established. In the case of hepatitis B virus (HBV)-associated HCC, molecular discrimination of IM from MO can be achieved by comparison of integrated HBV DNAs. However, Southern blotting cannot be used for this purpose when one tumor is saved in frozen form and the other is in paraffin-embedded form. To solve this problem, we employed polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays to confirm the clonality of primary and recurrent tumors. From the frozen tissue, we determined the junction between the integrated HBV and flanking genomic DNA by molecular cloning, and checked the existence of an identical junction in the DNA of paraffin-embedded tissue by PCR. Using this method, as well as Southern blotting, we proved in 6 of 8 patients that two nodular HCC lesions resected metachronously or simultaneously were caused by MO, while the remaining 2 cases were caused by IM. In 1 IM case, band patterns between two HCCs detected by Southern blotting were not identical.

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