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Key clinical point: Improved survival among children vs adults with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) despite greater fibrolamellar histology prevalence and positive lymph node number and similar metastasis rates is a likely result of a more aggressive surgical approach.

Major finding: Although children vs adults had a higher prevalence of fibrolamellar HCC (32% vs 9%) and number of positive lymph nodes (35% vs 17%; P  =  .02) and comparable metastasis rates (30% vs 28%; P  =  .47), they had significantly better 1-year (81% vs 70%) and 5-year (55% vs 48%) overall survival and surgical intervention (74% vs 62%) rates (all P < .001).

Study details: This study stratified the data of 1520 patients with grade ≥1 HCC from the National Cancer Database by age: <21 years (children; n = 244) and 21-40 years (young adults; n = 1276).

Disclosures: No source of funding was reported. SJ Commander declared receiving financial support from several sources.

Source: Commander SJ et al. Improved survival and higher rates of surgical resection associated with hepatocellular carcinoma in children as compared to young adults. Int J Cancer. 2022 (Jul 16). Doi:  10.1002/ijc.34215

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Key clinical point: Improved survival among children vs adults with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) despite greater fibrolamellar histology prevalence and positive lymph node number and similar metastasis rates is a likely result of a more aggressive surgical approach.

Major finding: Although children vs adults had a higher prevalence of fibrolamellar HCC (32% vs 9%) and number of positive lymph nodes (35% vs 17%; P  =  .02) and comparable metastasis rates (30% vs 28%; P  =  .47), they had significantly better 1-year (81% vs 70%) and 5-year (55% vs 48%) overall survival and surgical intervention (74% vs 62%) rates (all P < .001).

Study details: This study stratified the data of 1520 patients with grade ≥1 HCC from the National Cancer Database by age: <21 years (children; n = 244) and 21-40 years (young adults; n = 1276).

Disclosures: No source of funding was reported. SJ Commander declared receiving financial support from several sources.

Source: Commander SJ et al. Improved survival and higher rates of surgical resection associated with hepatocellular carcinoma in children as compared to young adults. Int J Cancer. 2022 (Jul 16). Doi:  10.1002/ijc.34215

Key clinical point: Improved survival among children vs adults with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) despite greater fibrolamellar histology prevalence and positive lymph node number and similar metastasis rates is a likely result of a more aggressive surgical approach.

Major finding: Although children vs adults had a higher prevalence of fibrolamellar HCC (32% vs 9%) and number of positive lymph nodes (35% vs 17%; P  =  .02) and comparable metastasis rates (30% vs 28%; P  =  .47), they had significantly better 1-year (81% vs 70%) and 5-year (55% vs 48%) overall survival and surgical intervention (74% vs 62%) rates (all P < .001).

Study details: This study stratified the data of 1520 patients with grade ≥1 HCC from the National Cancer Database by age: <21 years (children; n = 244) and 21-40 years (young adults; n = 1276).

Disclosures: No source of funding was reported. SJ Commander declared receiving financial support from several sources.

Source: Commander SJ et al. Improved survival and higher rates of surgical resection associated with hepatocellular carcinoma in children as compared to young adults. Int J Cancer. 2022 (Jul 16). Doi:  10.1002/ijc.34215

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Clinical Edge Journal Scan: HCC September 2022
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