Sex, race determine major risk factors for HCC in older patients
Click Here to Manage Email Alerts
Factors that most influence hepatocellular carcinoma risk varied between sex and race among elderly patients, but diabetes and obesity had the greatest overall effect in a recent study.
Researchers compared 6,991 patients aged 68 years or older diagnosed with HCC between 1994 and 2007 with a random sample of 255,702 Medicare beneficiaries with no previous HCC diagnosis. The mostly male cohort (65.7%), collected from the SEER database, was 71% white, 12% Asian, 8% black and 4% Hispanic.
Nearly a quarter of participants (22.9%) had HCV infection and 6.9% had HBV. Prior alcohol-related liver disease was observed in 31.2% of participants, and 4.5% had rare metabolic disorders. Diabetes and/or obesity was present in 61.5% of patients. HCC risk was significantly increased by HCV (OR=39.89; 95% CI, 36.29-43.84), HBV (OR=11.17; 95% CI, 9.18-13.59), alcohol-related disease (OR=4.06; 95% CI, 3.82-4.32), metabolic disorders (OR=3.45; 95% CI, 2.97-4.02) and diabetes/obesity (OR=2.47; 95% CI 2.34-2.61).
Investigators determined an overall population attributable fraction (PAF) of 64.5% for all evaluated risk factors. Men had a higher overall PAF than women (65.6% vs. 62.2%). When assessed by race, blacks had the lowest PAF (52.4%) while Asians had the highest (70.1%).
Diabetes/obesity had the largest overall PAF among assessed factors (36.6%), followed by alcohol-related disorders (23.5%) and HCV infection (22.4%). Diabetes/obesity also had the largest PAF among men (36.4%) and women (36.7%), as well as white (38.9%) and Hispanic patients (38.1%). HCV infection had the highest PAF among Asians (35.4%) and blacks (34.9%), and the second-highest among women (28.1%).
“This is the first population-based case-control study to report PAFs for HCC risk factors in the United States,” the researchers wrote. “The results … indicate that the dominant risk factors for HCC … may differ by sex and race/ethnicity. Overall, however, eliminating diabetes and obesity could have a larger effect on reducing the incidence of HCC than the elimination of any other risk factor.”
Disclosure: See the study for a full list of relevant disclosures.