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Estimation of lead-time bias and its impact on the outcome of surveillance for the early diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors :
Cucchetti A
Trevisani F
Pecorelli A
Erroi V
Farinati F
Ciccarese F
Rapaccini GL
Di Marco M
Caturelli E
Giannini EG
Zoli M
Borzio F
Cabibbo G
Felder M
Gasbarrini A
Sacco R
Foschi FG
Missale G
Morisco F
Baroni GS
Virdone R
Bernardi M
Pinna AD
Source :
Journal of hepatology [J Hepatol] 2014 Aug; Vol. 61 (2), pp. 333-41. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Apr 06.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background & Aims: Lead-time is the time by which diagnosis is anticipated by screening/surveillance with respect to the symptomatic detection of a disease. Any screening program, including surveillance for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), is subject to lead-time bias. Data regarding lead-time for HCC are lacking. Aims of the present study were to calculate lead-time and to assess its impact on the benefit obtainable from the surveillance of cirrhotic patients.<br />Methods: One-thousand three-hundred and eighty Child-Pugh class A/B patients from the ITA.LI.CA database, in whom HCC was detected during semiannual surveillance (n = 850), annual surveillance (n = 234) or when patients came when symptomatic (n = 296), were selected. Lead-time was estimated by means of appropriate formulas and Monte Carlo simulation, including 1000 patients for each arm.<br />Results: The 5-year overall survival after HCC diagnosis was 32.7% in semiannually surveilled patients, 25.2% in annually surveilled patients, and 12.2% in symptomatic patients (p<0.001). In a 10-year follow-up perspective, the median lead-time calculated for all surveilled patients was 6.5 months (7.2 for semiannual and 4.1 for annual surveillance). Lead-time bias accounted for most of the surveillance benefit until the third year of follow-up after HCC diagnosis. However, even after lead-time adjustment, semiannual surveillance maintained a survival benefit over symptomatic diagnosis (number of patients needed to screen = 13), as did annual surveillance (18 patients).<br />Conclusions: Lead-time bias is the main determinant of the short-term benefit provided by surveillance for HCC, but this benefit becomes factual in a long-term perspective, confirming the clinical utility of an anticipated diagnosis of HCC.<br /> (Copyright © 2014 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1600-0641
Volume :
61
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of hepatology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24717522
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2014.03.037