Liver transplantation (LT) is potentially curative for early hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) but time spent on the waiting list exposes patients to the risk of tumour progression prior to transplantation.
Aims: We prospectively evaluated the outcome for New Zealand patients listed for LT with a pre-transplant diagnosis of HCC.
Methods: Patients with 1 to 3 tumours, up to 5 cm in diameter, and no vascular invasion or extra-hepatic disease on imaging, were considered eligible for LT. The results were analysed by intention to treat from the time of listing.
Results: Fifty-nine patients were listed with a pre-transplant diagnosis of HCC between February 1998 and June 2004. Ten (17%) were de-listed before LT because of tumour progression, and 9 of 45 (20%) who underwent LT have experienced tumour recurrence up to 59 months post-transplant. For patients listed with a diagnosis of HCC, 5-year actuarial survival was 56.1% from the time of listing. For those listed and transplanted with a diagnosis of HCC, 5-year actuarial survival from the time of transplant was 63.5%. This is significantly worse than the 89.8% 5-year survival for patients transplanted without HCC over the same period (p=0.018) and this difference was entirely due to tumour recurrence.
Conclusions: 37% of patients listed according to our criteria were either de-listed due to tumour progression or experienced recurrence after LT. Based on this experience strategies aimed at preventing waiting list drop out have been adopted, however expansion of tumour-related selection criteria cannot be recommended without a concomitant increase in donor organ availability.