Background: The appropriate treatment strategy for transplantable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients with compensated cirrhosis remains controversial.
Methods: Surgical outcomes were reviewed in 136 cirrhotic patients with transplantable HCC who had undergone partial hepatectomy. Transplantable HCC was defined as that corresponding to Milan's criteria.
Results: The adverse prognostic factors for both survival and disease-free survival were histologic surgical margin of 5 mm or less, Child-Pugh B, and the presence of hepatitis C virus infection. The overall 5-year survival and disease-free survival rates of patients with 1 or none of the adverse prognostic factors were 73% and 33%, respectively, whereas those of patients with 2 or 3 adverse prognostic factors were 36% and 17%, respectively.
Conclusions: Transplantable HCC patients with 2 or 3 adverse prognostic factors should be considered candidates for liver transplantation, whereas patients with only 1 or none of the adverse prognostic factors are good candidates for partial hepatectomy.