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Abstract Details
HCC Recurrence in HCV Patients After Liver Transplantation: SiLVER Study Reveals Benefits of Sirolimus in Combination With CNIs
Jens M Werner1, Matthias Hornung1, Rubertha Krah1, Markus Götz1, Andreas A Schnitzbauer12, Hans J Schlitt1, Edward K Geissler1, International SiLVER study group
Author information
1Department of Surgery, University Hospital Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany.
2Department of Surgery, University Hospital Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Abstract
Background: Factors affecting outcomes in liver transplant (LTx) recipients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and hepatitis C viral (HCV) infection include the choice of immunosuppression. Here, we analyzed the HCV+ subgroup of patients from the randomized controlled, international SiLVER Study.
Methods: We performed a post-hoc analysis of 166 HCV+ SiLVER Study patients regarding HCC outcome after LTx. Control patients (group A: n=88) received mTOR inhibitor (mTORi)-free, calcineurin inhibitor (CNI)-based versus sirolimus-based immunosuppression (group B: n=78).
Results: We found no significant difference regarding HCV-RNA titers between group A and B. Since no effect in group B could be due to variable sirolimus dosing, we split group B into patients receiving sirolimus-based immunosuppression + CNIs for >50% (B1; n=44) or <50% (B2; n=34) of the time. While there remained no difference in HCV-RNA titer between groups, HCC recurrence-free survival in group B1 (81.8%) was markedly better versus both group A (62.7%; P=0.0136) and group B2 (64.7%; P=0.0326); Interestingly, further subgroup analysis revealed an increase (P=0.0012) in liver-enzyme values in group B2.
Conclusion: In HCV patients with HCC and LTx, mTORi immunosuppression + CNIs yields excellent outcomes. Unexpectedly, higher levels of liver inflammation and poorer outcomes occur with mTORi monotherapy in the HCV+ subgroup.