Background: The model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) has been used to prioritize cirrhotic patients awaiting liver transplantation. It is not clear whether MELD correlates with liver functional reserve that changes over time. This study investigated the correlation of sequential changes between MELD and Child-Turcotte-Pugh (CTP) scores in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
Methods: A total of 192 HCC patients undergoing transarterial chemoembolization or percutaneous injection therapy were studied.
Results: The MELD and CTP scores of study patients at pretreatment, early (median, 2 wk) and late (median, 8 wk) stage after treatment were 10.1+/-3.5, 12.9+/-3.2, and 11.7+/-3.1, and 6.2+/-1.1, 7.5+/-1.1, and 6.9+/-1.2, respectively. There was a significant correlation of the serial changes for the period between pretreatment and early stage (rho=0.605, P<0.001), and between early to late stage (rho=0.512, P<0.001) after treatment. The corresponding increase and decrease of MELD score was 2.1 and 2.0, respectively, per unit change of the CTP score. The correlation was still significant in the stratified analysis according to various clinical parameters. In the Cox multivariate model, tumor size >5 cm [relative risk (RR)=2.58, P<0.001], multiple HCCs (RR=1.78, P=0.013), CTP class B or C (RR=3.06, P<0.001), and MELD score >15 (RR=2.17, P=0.023) were independent poor prognostic predictors.
Conclusions: Serial determinations of the MELD score well correlate with the changes of CTP score. The MELD score may be useful in measuring liver functional reserve and outcome prediction in HCC patients undergoing locoregional therapy.