Africa Guidelines for Hepatocellular Carcinoma Buildup Process
Elwakil, Mohamed Reda; Ghassan Abou-alfa; Ashraf Omar;
Abstract
PURPOSE Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the fourth most common cancer in Africa, has
a dismal overall survival of only 3 months like in sub-Saharan Africa. This is
affected by the low gross domestic product and human development index,
absence of coherent guidelines, and other factors.
METHODS An open forum for HCC-experienced health care workers from Africa and the
rest of the world was held in October 2021. Participants completed a survey to
help assess the real-life access to screening, diagnoses, and treatment in the
North and Southern Africa (NS), East and West Africa (EW), Central Africa (C),
and the rest of the world.
RESULTS Of 461 participants from all relevant subspecialties, 372 were from Africa. Most
African participants provided hepatitis B vaccination and treatment for hepatitis B and C. More than half of the participants use serum alpha-fetoprotein
and ultrasound for surveillance. Only 20% reported using image-guided diagnostic liver biopsy. The Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer is the most used staging
system (52%). Liver transplant is available for only 28% of NS and 3% EW. C
reported a significantly lower availability of resection. Availability of local
therapy ranged from 94% in NS to 62% in C. Sorafenib is the most commonly
used systemic therapy (66%). Only 12.9% reported access to other medications
including immune checkpoint inhibitors. Besides 42% access to regorafenib in
NS, second-line treatments were not provided.
CONCLUSION Similarities and differences in the care for patients with HCC in Africa are reported. This reconfirms the major gaps in access and availability especially in C
and marginally less so in EW. This is a call for concerted multidisciplinary efforts
to achieve and sustain a reduction in incidence and mortality from HCC in Africa.
a dismal overall survival of only 3 months like in sub-Saharan Africa. This is
affected by the low gross domestic product and human development index,
absence of coherent guidelines, and other factors.
METHODS An open forum for HCC-experienced health care workers from Africa and the
rest of the world was held in October 2021. Participants completed a survey to
help assess the real-life access to screening, diagnoses, and treatment in the
North and Southern Africa (NS), East and West Africa (EW), Central Africa (C),
and the rest of the world.
RESULTS Of 461 participants from all relevant subspecialties, 372 were from Africa. Most
African participants provided hepatitis B vaccination and treatment for hepatitis B and C. More than half of the participants use serum alpha-fetoprotein
and ultrasound for surveillance. Only 20% reported using image-guided diagnostic liver biopsy. The Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer is the most used staging
system (52%). Liver transplant is available for only 28% of NS and 3% EW. C
reported a significantly lower availability of resection. Availability of local
therapy ranged from 94% in NS to 62% in C. Sorafenib is the most commonly
used systemic therapy (66%). Only 12.9% reported access to other medications
including immune checkpoint inhibitors. Besides 42% access to regorafenib in
NS, second-line treatments were not provided.
CONCLUSION Similarities and differences in the care for patients with HCC in Africa are reported. This reconfirms the major gaps in access and availability especially in C
and marginally less so in EW. This is a call for concerted multidisciplinary efforts
to achieve and sustain a reduction in incidence and mortality from HCC in Africa.
Other data
| Title | Africa Guidelines for Hepatocellular Carcinoma Buildup Process | Authors | Elwakil, Mohamed Reda ; Ghassan Abou-alfa; Ashraf Omar | Keywords | HCC;Hepatocellular Carcinoma | Issue Date | 2023 | Publisher | American Society of Clinical Oncology with their publishing partner, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins | Journal | JCO Global Oncology | Volume | 9 | Issue | 9 | Start page | 1 | End page | 10 | DOI | https://doi.org/10.1200/GO.23.00159 |
Attached Files
| File | Description | Size | Format | Existing users please Login |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Approach to Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) management in Low Middel-Income countreies Book-Ashraf Tabll-2025.pdf | 19.21 MB | Adobe PDF | Request a copy |
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