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Backgrounds: Surgeries are the mainstream of curative therapies for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). However, high risk of recurrent HCC after liver surgeries is still the unsolved clinical issue (early recurrence 21% per year; late recurrence 18% per year). Early recurrence mainly result from disseminated HCC; by contrast, late recurrence usually originate from carcinogenic microenvironment. Currently, no large-scale nationwide studies that integrate laboratory date and clinical information was performed to investigate risk factors and prognosis of post-operative recurrent HCC. Besides, owing to economic issue, few companies would initiate pharmacologic studies to investigate chemoprevention agents for HCC. Furthermore, few biomarkers were discovered from Taiwanese HCC cohort to predict post-operative tumor recurrence because of no standardized cooperative platforms to share biological tissue and clinical information. Therefore, we wish to utilize a nationwide retrospective cohort from integrated national health insurance database (NHIRD) and a prospective multi-center clinical cohort study to address aforementioned issues.
Aims:
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Study subject and methods:
Nationwide retrospective cohort study
Multicenter prospective cohort study:
Hospital biobank based retrospective case-control study Investigate clinical and biological parameters in prediction of tumor recurrence in HCC surgical patients by hospital based biobank and relevant clinical information
Laboratory in-vivo and in-vitro study Investigate causal relationship between prognosis of HCC and selected biomarkers from above studies as well as four universal tumor theragnostic markers (ADAM9, MTHFD2, RRM2, and SLC2A1) and explore treatment effects of corresponding inhibitors
Expected results: For scientists, they may benefit from the shared database of Taiwanese HCC surgical patients for the HCC related researches; for physicians, they could predict risk of post-operative recurrent HCC in Taiwanese HCC patients and use generic drugs as potentially chemopreventive drugs for HCC; for patients, they could benefit from the personalized medical advice to increase the survival; for the authorities, they could design a policy to reduce the risk of post-operative recurrent HCC, and even prolong HCC patients' survival in a cost-effective way by using generic drugs as chemopreventive regimens for HCC.
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800 participants in 1 patient group
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Chun-Chieh Yeh, Dr.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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