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Diagnostic value of 5 serum biomarkers for hepatocellular carcinoma with different epidemiological backgrounds: A large-scale, retrospective study

Authors :
Lisha Qi
Xiehua Zhang
Qing Xi
Duo Zuo
Zhuoyu Sun
Tianqiang Song
Hua Guo
Wei Lu
Jing Wu
Dongming Liu
Lu Chen
Xiaofang Zhang
Guangtao Li
Xiaofen Yue
Yi Luo
Ning Zhang
Yueguo Li
Chen Liwei
Source :
Cancer Biology & Medicine, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 256-270 (2021), Cancer Biology & Medicine
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
China Anti-Cancer Association, 2021.

Abstract

Objective: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a lethal global disease that requires an accurate diagnosis. We assessed the potential of 5 serum biomarkers (AFP, AFU, GGT-II, GPC3, and HGF) in the diagnosis of HCC. Methods: In this retrospective study, we measured the serum levels of each biomarker using ELISAs in 921 participants, including 298 patients with HCC, 154 patients with chronic hepatitis (CH), 122 patients with liver cirrhosis (LC), and 347 healthy controls from 3 hospitals. Patients negative for hepatitis B surface antigen and hepatitis C antibody (called “NBNC-HCC”) and patients positive for the above indices (called “HBV-HCC and HCV-HCC”) were enrolled. The selected diagnostic model was constructed using a training cohort (n = 468), and a validation cohort (n = 453) was used to validate our results. Receiver operating characteristic analysis was used to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy. Results: The α-L-fucosidase (AFU)/α-fetoprotein (AFP) combination was best able to distinguish NBNC-HCC [area under the curve: 0.986 (95% confidence interval: 0.958–0.997), sensitivity: 92.6%, specificity: 98.9%] from healthy controls in the test cohort. For screening populations at risk of developing HCC (CH and LC), the AFP/AFU combination improved the diagnostic specificity for early-stage HCC [area under the curve: 0.776 (0.712–0.831), sensitivity: 52.5%, specificity: 91.6% in the test group]. In all-stage HBV-HCC and HCV-HCC, AFU was also the best candidate biomarker combined with AFP [area under the curve: 0.835 (0.784–0.877), sensitivity 69.1%, specificity: 87.4% in the test group]. All results were verified in the validation group. Conclusions: The AFP/AFU combination could be used to identify NBNC-HCC from healthy controls and hepatitis-related HCC from at-risk patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20953941
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Biology & Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7618888689caf6a254336ecd0408d392