1Department of Medicine, Nowon Eulji Medical Center, Eulji University, Eulji University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea
2Department of Medicine, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea
© 2024 The Korean Liver Cancer Association.
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Study societies | EASL6 (2018) | BCLC7 (2022) | KLCA-NCC8 (2022) | AASLD9 (2023) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Diagnosis and staging | Recommends local multidisciplinary board discussion for tiny typical lesions | Multidisciplinary approach is key from diagnosis to treatment strategy | For probable HCC, consider follow-up imaging or biopsy within 3 months | Advises multidisciplinary discussion for optimal follow-up of LR-4 observation and consideration of biopsies for LR-4 and LR-5 |
Multidisciplinary discussion for treatment plan | Emphasizes multidisciplinary tumor board for tumor staging | |||
Team composition | Implies involvement of various specialties | Includes expert radiologists, interventional radiologists, radiation oncologists, pathologists, nurses, clinicians, surgeons, palliative care specialists, and social workers | Includes hepatologists, gastroenterologists, surgeons, radiologists, oncologists, and other medical practitioners | Includes hepatologists, radiologists, pathologists, surgeons, oncologists, nurses, social workers, and palliative care providers |
Treatment | Multidisciplinary teams for tailored treatment options | Multidisciplinary discussions for best treatment option due to heterogeneity | Multidisciplinary approach key to improving satisfaction, reducing progression, prolonging survival | Managed in multidisciplinary care setting |
Specific treatment Considerations | Stage migration strategy pending multidisciplinary decision | Not specifically addressed | Multidisciplinary approach with palliative care for pain management | Oncologic outcomes vs. liver decompensation requires multidisciplinary assessment |
No single surgical modality suits all HCC presentations | Extended surgical resection indications and down staging to Milan criteria after multidisciplinary discussion; systemic therapy decisions best performed multidisciplinary | |||
A multidisciplinary approach is essential | ||||
TACE should be considered for patients with segmental portal vein tumor invasion in multidisciplinary team sessions | ||||
The use of SIRT vs. sorafenib in advanced HCC should be determined after multidisciplinary board discussion due to unproven survival benefits |
Study | Country | Study design | Sample size | Intervention | Specialized department convened | Topic discussed | Frequency |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chang et al.14 (2008) | USA | Retrospective | 121 | MDT | Hepatologists, oncologists, radiologists, and surgeons | Imagining and pathology interpretation, diagnosis, management | N/A |
Wiggans et al.13 (2013) | UK | Retrospective | 438 | MDT | Radiologists, oncologists, surgeons, and physicians | Radiological, pathological diagnosis differ | 1 week |
Yopp et al.15 (2014) | USA | Retrospective | 355 | MDT | Physicians from surgical oncology, transplant hepatology, interventional radiology, diagnostic radiology, radiation oncology, medical oncology | Imagining and pathology interpretation, diagnosis, management | 1 week |
Zhang et al.12 (2013) | USA | Retrospective | 343 | MDT | Surgical oncologist, medical oncologist, radiation oncologist, radiologist, pathologist, interventional radiologist, hepatologist, and transplant surgeon | Imaging and pathology interpretation, diagnosis, and management plan | Occasionally |
Gashin et al.18 (2014) | USA | Retrospective | 137 | MDT | Five hepatologists, three oncologists, one radiation oncologist, three interventional radiologists, one pathologist, three surgeons, three radiologists, and five mid-level staff including nurses, nurse practitioners and physician assistants | Imaging and pathology interpretation, diagnosis, and management plan | 1 week |
Chirikov et al.20 (2015) | USA | Retrospective | 3,588 | Multispecialty (3 or more specialists) | Surgeons, radiology oncologist, intervention radiologist, hematologist/medical oncologist, gastroenterologist, and generalist | Imaging and pathology interpretation, diagnosis, and management plan | N/A |
Charriere et al.31 (2017) | France | Retrospective | 387 | MDT | Senior physicians, specialized in hepatology, oncology, hepatobiliary surgery, transplantation, and radiology | Treatment | 1 week |
Agarwal et al.33 (2017) | USA | Retrospective | 655 | MDT | Transplant hepatologists, medical oncologists, hepatobiliary and transplant surgeons, pathologists, diagnostic, and interventional radiologists | Imaging and pathology interpretation, diagnosis, and management plan | 1 week |
Serper et al.23 (2017) | USA | Retrospective | 3,988 | MDT | Hepatologists, gastroenterologists, surgeons, oncologists | Treatment | N/A |
Kaplan et al.16 (2018) | USA | Retrospective | 3,188 | MDT | Hepatologists, gastroenterologists, surgeons, oncologists | N/A | N/A |
Duininck et al.32 (2019) | USA | Retrospective | 204 | MDT | Surgical oncologist, interventional radiologist, hepatologist, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, and internal medicine physicians | Imaging and pathology interpretation, diagnosis, and management plan | N/A |
Sinn et al.17 (2019) | Korea | Retrospective | 6,619 | MDT | Hepatologists, surgeons, diagnostic radiologists, interventional radiologists specialized at local ablation therapies, interventional radiologists specialized at transarterial embolotherapies, radiation oncologists, medical oncologists, pathologists and coordinators | Imaging and pathology interpretation, diagnosis, and management plan | 1 week |
Tseng et al.21 (2023) | Taiwan | Retrospective | 32,784 | MDT | Integrated medical staff in each category | N/A | N/A |
Study | Etiology | Stage | Sample size (MDT vs. non-MDT) | Control | Follow-up periods (months) | Outcome (treatment) | Outcome (mortality) | Who benefits the most? |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chang et al.14 (2008) | HCV (69%) | AJCC stage I-IV | 183 (121 vs. 62) | Pre-MDT (previous 3 years) | 9.5 vs. 4.5 | Receiving curative treatment (19% vs. 6%, P<0.001) | Survival rate during follow-up periods (65% vs. 21%, P<0.001) | AJCC stage II and IV |
Yopp et al.15 (2014) | HCV (60%) | BCLC A-D | 355 (105 vs. 250) | Pre-MDT (previous 4 years) | 7.9 vs. 4.2 | Receiving curative treatment (21% vs. 10%, P=0.006) | Adjusted HR 2.5 (2-3) for overall survival | BCLC B, C, and D |
Gashin et al.18 (2014) | HCV (62%) | N/A | 137 (N/A) | Non-adherence to MDT decision | N/A | Receiving liver transplantation (25.6%vs.14.4%,P=0.10) | 1 year survival rate (61.7% vs. 56.7%, P=0.29) | N/A |
Chirikov et al.20 (2015) | HCV | Cancer stage 1-4 | 3,588 (1,434 vs. 811) | One discipline | N/A | Higher rate of liver-directed, radiation, and transplant, and low rate of resection and chemotherapy (P<0.001) | Adjusted HR 0.90 (P=0.04) | Chemotherapy recipients |
Charriere et al.31 (2017) | Alcohol (40%) | BCLC 0-D | 387 (255 vs. 132) | Not following MDT decision | 27.5 | N/A | Adjusted HR 0.39 (95% CI, 0.27-0.54) | MELD <10 |
Agarwal et al.33 (2017) | N/A | T2 stage (36%) | 655 (306 vs. 349) | Not managed through MDT | N/A | Receiving any treatment (OR, 2.80; 95% CI, 1.71-4.59) | Adjusted HR 0.72 (95% CI, 0.55-0.94) | T2 tumor stage |
Serper et al.23 (2017) | HCV and alcohol (39%) | BCLC 0-D | 3,988 (1,366 vs. 2,622) | Not managed through MDT | 1.1 |
Receiving active HCC therapy (OR, 1.19; 95% CI, 0.98-1.46) | Adjusted HR 0.83 (95% CI, 0.77-0.90) | N/A |
Kaplan et al.16 (2018) | HCV and alcohol (39%) | BCLC 0-D | 3,188 (2,062 vs. 1,121) | Not managed through MDT | N/A | N/A | Mean survival (597.4 vs. 471.9 days) | N/A |
Duininck et al.32 (2019) | HCV | BCLC 1-4 | 204 (134 vs. 70) | Pre-MDT | N/A | Receiving surgery (49% vs. 30%, P=0.02) | Adjusted HR 0.62 (95% CI, 0.40-0.98) | N/A |
Sinn et al.17 (2019) | HBV (76.3%) | BCLC 0-D | 6,619 (738 vs. 5,881) | Pre-MDT | 3.5 |
Receiving curative treatment (48.1% vs. 55.9%) | Adjusted HR 0.47 (95% CI, 0.41-0.53) | ALBI grade 2, 3 |
BCLC B, C | ||||||||
High AFP ≥200 ng/mL | ||||||||
Tseng et al.21 (2023) | HBV or HCV | BCLC 0-D | 32,784 (10,928 vs. 21,856) | Not managed through MDT | N/A | N/A | Adjusted HR 0.88 (95% CI, 0.84-0.92) | BCLC B, C |
HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; EASL, European Association for the Study of the Liver; BCLC, Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer; KLCA-NCC, Korean Liver Cancer Association-National Cancer Center; AASLD, American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases; LR, liver imaging-reporting and data system; TACE, transarterial chemoembolization; SIRT, selective internal radiation therapy.
MDT, multidisciplinary team; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; USA, United States of America; N/A, not assessed; UK, United Kingdom.
MDT, multidisciplinary team; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HCV, hepatitis C virus; AJCC, American Joint Committee on Cancer; BCLC, Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer; HR, hazard ratio; N/A, not assessed; MELD, model for end-stage liver disease; OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; ALBI, albumin-bilirubin; AFP, alpha-fetoprotein. years.