Abstract

The prognostic impact of diabetes mellitus and its association with virological factors on patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are unclear. This study aimed to investigate the outcome in HCC patients undergoing resection with and without diabetes mellitus and the interaction with hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV). A total of 239 HCC patients were included. Survival and tumour recurrence were analysed according to the status of diabetes mellitus and viral hepatitis. Diabetic patients tended to have an overall decreased survival compared with non-diabetic patients in 32 +/- 19 months of follow-up. A total of 113 (47%) patients developed tumour recurrence during the follow-up period. No significant difference of tumour recurrence between diabetic and non-diabetic patients, or between patients seropositive and seronegative for HBV surface antigen (HBsAg), was noted. Stratified analysis showed that diabetic patients with HBV but not with HCV infection had a poor long-term outcome. In the HBV group, the one-, three- and five-year survival rates were 83%, 51% and 41% versus 90%, 78% and 73% in diabetic and non-diabetic patients, respectively, compared with 90%, 83% and 42% versus 91%, 73% and 73% in the HCV group with and without diabetes mellitus, respectively. Cox multivariate analysis disclosed that diabetic patients seropositive for HBsAg had a significantly poor survival. Diabetes mellitus does not affect the long-term survival in HCV-related HCC but is a recurrence-independent poor prognostic factor for HBV-related HCC.

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