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					| Título : | Factors associated with recurrence and survival in liver transplant patients with HCC - a single center retrospective study |  
					| Tipo de documento : | documento electrónico |  
					| Autores : | Sergio Iván Hoyos Duque,  ; Carlos Ernesto Guzmán Luna,  ; Álvaro Mena Hurtado,  ; Juan Carlos Restrepo Gutiérrez,  ; Gonzalo Correa Arango,  ; Juan Camilo Pérez Cadavid, |  
					| Fecha de publicación : | 2015 |  
					| Títulos uniformes : | Annals of Hepatology 
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					| Idioma : | Inglés (eng) |  
					| Palabras clave : | Cancer  liver transplant  cirrhosis  biopsy |  
					| Resumen : | Introduction: Hepatocellular carcinoma is the most common primary tumor of the liver and is diagnosed in more than a half million people worldwide each year. This study aims to assess factors associated with the recurrence and survival of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and liver transplantation in a cohort of patients from Medellín, Colombia. Material and methods. This was a descriptive retrospective study of a consecutive series of liver transplant patients from the Pablo Tobon Uribe Hospital of Medellín from January 2004 to May 2013. Demographic, clinical, imaging, and pathology variables were analyzed. Results: Three hundred thirty liver transplants were performed during the study period, 54 cases (16.4%) had one or more hepatocellular carcinomas in the explant, and 79.6% of these patients were men. Cirrhotic patients had different etiologies, but most of them were due to alcohol abuse (22.2%), followed by hepatitis B virus infection (20.4 %), and hepatitis C virus infection (18.5%). In the pathology specimen, 51.9% had only one focus of hepatocellular carcinoma, 22.2% had two foci and 12.9% had three tumors. Recurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma occurred in 7.4% patients with an average time of 81 months. During follow-up, 25.9% of the patients died in an average time of 67.9 months (CI95 59.1-80.1 months). Conclusion: Recurrence and survival of patients with liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma in this study had a similar behavior as that reported in the world literature. The factors associated with these outcomes were vascular invasion, poor tumor differentiation and satellitosis. |  
					| Mención de responsabilidad : | Sergio Hoyos, Jorge Escobar, Doris Cardona, Carlos Guzmán, Álvaro Mena, Germán Osorio, Camilo Pérez, Juan C Restrepo, Gonzalo Correa |  
					| Referencia : | Ann Hepatol. 2015 Jan-Feb;14(1):58-63. |  
					| PMID : | 25536642 |  
					| En línea : | https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1665268119308014 |  
					| Enlace permanente : | https://hospitalpablotobon.cloudbiteca.com/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_dis | 
Factors associated with recurrence and survival in liver transplant patients with HCC - a single center retrospective study [documento electrónico] / Sergio Iván Hoyos Duque ,  ; Carlos Ernesto Guzmán Luna ,  ; Álvaro Mena Hurtado ,  ; Juan Carlos Restrepo Gutiérrez ,  ; Gonzalo Correa Arango ,  ; Juan Camilo Pérez Cadavid ,  . - 2015.Obra  :  Annals of HepatologyIdioma  : Inglés (eng ) 
					| Palabras clave : | Cancer  liver transplant  cirrhosis  biopsy |  
					| Resumen : | Introduction: Hepatocellular carcinoma is the most common primary tumor of the liver and is diagnosed in more than a half million people worldwide each year. This study aims to assess factors associated with the recurrence and survival of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and liver transplantation in a cohort of patients from Medellín, Colombia. Material and methods. This was a descriptive retrospective study of a consecutive series of liver transplant patients from the Pablo Tobon Uribe Hospital of Medellín from January 2004 to May 2013. Demographic, clinical, imaging, and pathology variables were analyzed. Results: Three hundred thirty liver transplants were performed during the study period, 54 cases (16.4%) had one or more hepatocellular carcinomas in the explant, and 79.6% of these patients were men. Cirrhotic patients had different etiologies, but most of them were due to alcohol abuse (22.2%), followed by hepatitis B virus infection (20.4 %), and hepatitis C virus infection (18.5%). In the pathology specimen, 51.9% had only one focus of hepatocellular carcinoma, 22.2% had two foci and 12.9% had three tumors. Recurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma occurred in 7.4% patients with an average time of 81 months. During follow-up, 25.9% of the patients died in an average time of 67.9 months (CI95 59.1-80.1 months). Conclusion: Recurrence and survival of patients with liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma in this study had a similar behavior as that reported in the world literature. The factors associated with these outcomes were vascular invasion, poor tumor differentiation and satellitosis. |  
					| Mención de responsabilidad : | Sergio Hoyos, Jorge Escobar, Doris Cardona, Carlos Guzmán, Álvaro Mena, Germán Osorio, Camilo Pérez, Juan C Restrepo, Gonzalo Correa |  
					| Referencia : | Ann Hepatol. 2015 Jan-Feb;14(1):58-63. |  
					| PMID : | 25536642 |  
					| En línea : | https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1665268119308014 |  
					| Enlace permanente : | https://hospitalpablotobon.cloudbiteca.com/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_dis | 
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