Abstract

Liver transplant (LT) is the treatment of choice for patients diagnosed with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) within the Milan criteria. Its applicability is limited by the risk for recurrence and the impact on waiting lists. We aimed to describe our results in patients with LT due to HCC and to evaluate its long-term survival outcomes. A retrospective observational study was carried out on all patients undergoing LT between January 2010 and December 2020. Among 336 patients undergoing LT, 99 had early-stage HCC with underlying cirrhosis in 93.9%. Average time from HCC diagnosis to transplant was 161 days [99-248 days]. In this period, 91 (91.9%) patients received adjuvant treatment. Seven (7.1%) of 99 patients had HCC recurrence and 33 (33.3%) died during the follow-up period. In terms of survival, LT in patients with and without HCC resulted in 6-month survival of 87.9% and 84.3%, 1-year patient survival of 84.7% and 79.4%, 3-year survival rate of 71.2% and 70.6%, and 5-year survival rate of 64.6% and 65.3% (P = .493), respectively. Based on Milan criteria as the benchmark for selecting HCC candidates to LT, both short- and long-term transplant survival rates achieved similar results when compared with patients without HCC. These results sustain transplantation as the treatment of choice for patients with cirrhosis and in the early stage of HCC.

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