CancerFax
Gastrointestinal Cancer · Liver

Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Hepatocellular carcinoma develops predominantly on cirrhotic liver backgrounds and requires simultaneous management of tumor burden and underlying liver function. BCLC staging, Child-Pugh score, and AFP trajectory guide decisions across surgery, ablation, TACE, TARE, and systemic therapy. CancerFax helps patients access atezolizumab-bevacizumab combinations, TARE programs, and specialist hepato-oncology centers internationally including in China.

  • BCLC staging, AFP & liver function assessment
  • TACE, TARE, IO combinations & targeted therapy
  • China liver cancer center & advanced trial access
Median Age at Diagnosis
64 years
5th Most Common Cancer
Worldwide
Male to Female Ratio
3:1
5-Year Survival
18% overall
Occurs in Cirrhosis
80-90%

What is Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Types and Subtypes

Hepatocellular carcinoma is classified by disease stage, which determines treatment approach and prognosis. The Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) staging system is most commonly used and incorporates tumor characteristics, liver function, and performance status.

Symptoms and Signs

Hepatocellular carcinoma often develops silently in patients with cirrhosis or chronic hepatitis. Early-stage HCC may be asymptomatic and detected only through surveillance imaging. As disease progresses, patients may develop symptoms related to the tumor itself or worsening liver function.

Causes and Risk Factors

Hepatocellular carcinoma develops through a multistep process involving chronic inflammation, fibrosis, cirrhosis, and accumulation of genetic alterations. The most significant risk factors are chronic viral hepatitis and cirrhosis, which account for the majority of HCC cases globally.

Diagnosis and Investigations

Diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma is based on imaging characteristics in the setting of cirrhosis or chronic liver disease, supplemented by biomarkers and tissue biopsy when needed. Early detection through surveillance in at-risk patients improves outcomes. Accurate diagnosis and staging are essential for treatment planning.

Disease Staging and Risk Stratification

Hepatocellular carcinoma is staged using the Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) staging system, which incorporates tumor burden, liver function (Child-Pugh class), and performance status. Stage at diagnosis is the most important prognostic factor and guides treatment selection.

Standard Treatment Options

Management of HCC is multimodal and based on the stage of the disease, degree of liver dysfunction, and patient’s performance status. Early-stage disease presents the highest chances of cure, while late-stage cases need systemic treatment. Liver transplantation presents the best chance of cure in early-stage HCC patients who are cirrhotic.

Advanced & Emerging Therapies

Significant advances in HCC treatment have occurred in recent years, particularly in immunotherapy and combination approaches. These emerging therapies are improving outcomes, especially for advanced disease, and are expanding treatment options across all disease stages.

  • Immunotherapy

    Checkpoint Inhibitors and Combinations

    Atezolizumab + bevacizumab (anti-PD-L1 + anti-VEGF) shows improved outcomes vs. sorafenib. Nivolumab + ipilimumab (anti-PD-1 + anti-CTLA-4) approved for advanced HCC. Pembrolizumab monotherapy also approved. These represent major advances in systemic therapy.

    Approved
  • Targeted Therapy

    Multi-Kinase Inhibitors

    Lenvatinib (multikinase inhibitor) approved for first-line advanced HCC. Regorafenib and cabozantinib approved for second-line. These agents target multiple pathways driving HCC growth.

    Approved
  • Combination Therapy

    Targeted + Immunotherapy Combinations

    Emerging data support combinations of targeted therapy with immunotherapy. Bevacizumab + immunotherapy combinations showing promise. Ongoing trials investigating optimal combinations.

    Clinical Trial
  • Surgical Innovation

    Liver Transplantation

    Excellent outcomes for early-stage HCC in cirrhotic patients. Transplant offers both tumor cure and cirrhosis treatment. Milan criteria traditionally used for selection. Expanded criteria being evaluated.

    Approved
  • Locoregional Therapy

    Radioembolization (TARE)

    Yttrium-90 radioembolization delivers radiation directly to tumor. May be combined with systemic therapy. Emerging data support improved outcomes.

    Approved
  • Radiation Therapy

    Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT)

    Advanced radiation technique for small HCC tumors. May be used for tumors not amenable to surgery or ablation. Emerging role in multimodal treatment.

    Approved
  • Systemic Therapy

    Emerging Agents and Combinations

    Novel agents targeting HCC pathways under investigation. Combination approaches with immunotherapy and targeted therapy being studied. Personalized therapy based on tumor molecular profiling emerging.

    Investigational

Biomarkers & Molecular Features

Molecular profiling of hepatocellular carcinoma is increasingly important for understanding tumor biology, predicting treatment response, and guiding personalized therapy. Multiple biomarkers have prognostic and predictive significance.

When to Seek a Second Opinion

Expert review is particularly valuable in hepatocellular carcinoma given the complexity of treatment options and the importance of accurate staging and liver function assessment. Second opinion is recommended at multiple points in the treatment course.

Clinical Trials & Research

Prognosis & Outcome Factors

Prognosis for hepatocellular carcinoma varies dramatically based on disease stage, liver function, and treatment response. Early-stage disease detected through surveillance offers the best outcomes, while advanced disease has more limited prognosis but improving with newer therapies.

Supportive Care & Living With Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Supportive care is an essential component of hepatocellular carcinoma management, addressing both the physical and emotional impacts of the disease and its treatment on the patient and family.

How CancerFax Helps You Explore Treatment Options

CancerFax assists patients and families with hepatocellular carcinoma by coordinating expert review of diagnostic imaging, biopsy results, liver function tests, AFP levels, and hepatitis serology to confirm accurate diagnosis and staging. We connect patients with specialist hepatologists, surgical oncologists, and transplant surgeons experienced in comprehensive HCC management. We facilitate access to surgery, liver transplantation, ablation, embolization, targeted therapy, immunotherapy, and clinical trial opportunities at major hepatology and oncology centers globally, including specialized institutions in China.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common primary malignancy of the liver. It accounts for >90% of primary liver tumors and is the fifth most common cancer worldwide. HCC usually develops in patients with cirrhosis or chronic liver disease from hepatitis B, hepatitis C, or other causes.