作者
Alessandro Vitale,Gianluca Svegliati‐Baroni,Alessio Ortolani,M. Cucco,Giulio Valentino Dalla Riva,Edoardo G. Giannini,Fabio Piscaglia,Gianludovico Rapaccini,Mariella Di Marco,Eugenio Caturelli,Marco Zoli,Rodolfo Sacco,Giuseppe Cabibbo,Fabio Marra,Andrea Mega,Filomena Morisco,Antonio Gasbarrini,Francesco Giuseppe Foschi,Gabriele Missale,Alberto Masotto,Gerardo Nardone,Giovanni Raimondo,Francesco Azzaroli,Gianpaolo Vidili,Filippo Oliveri,Filippo Pelizzaro,Rafael Morales,Umberto Cillo,Franco Trevisani,Luca Miele,Giulio Marchesini,Fabio Farinati
摘要
Metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) represents a new inclusive definition of the whole spectrum of liver diseases associated to metabolic disorders. The main objective of this study was to compare patients with MAFLD and non-MAFLD with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) included in a nationally representative cohort.We analysed 6882 consecutive patients with HCC enrolled from 2002 to 2019 by 23 Italian Liver Cancer centres to compare epidemiological and future trends in three subgroups: pure, single aetiology MAFLD (S-MAFLD); mixed aetiology MAFLD (metabolic and others, M-MAFLD); and non-MAFLD HCC.MAFLD was diagnosed in the majority of patients with HCC (68.4%). The proportion of both total MAFLD and S-MAFLD HCC significantly increased over time (from 50.4% and 3.6% in 2002-2003, to 77.3% and 28.9% in 2018-2019, respectively, p<0.001). In Italy S-MAFLD HCC is expected to overcome M-MAFLD HCC in about 6 years. Patients with S-MAFLD HCC were older, more frequently men and less frequently cirrhotic with clinically relevant portal hypertension and a surveillance-related diagnosis. They had more frequently large tumours and extrahepatic metastases. After weighting, and compared with patients with non-MAFLD, S-MAFLD and M-MAFLD HCC showed a significantly lower overall (p=0.026, p=0.004) and HCC-related (p<0.001, for both) risk of death. Patients with S-MAFLD HCC showed a significantly higher risk of non-HCC-related death (p=0.006).The prevalence of MAFLD HCC in Italy is rapidly increasing to cover the majority of patients with HCC. Despite a less favourable cancer stage at diagnosis, patients with MAFLD HCC have a lower risk of HCC-related death, suggesting reduced cancer aggressiveness.