Serum Glycomics as Prognostic and Diagnostic Biomarkers of Disease Recurrence in Liver Transplant Recipients With Hepatocellular Carcinoma
- Conditions
- Diagnostic BiomarkerHepatocellular CarcinomaPrognostic BiomarkerLiver Transplantation
- Interventions
- Diagnostic Test: HCCRecurrencePrognosticScoreDiagnostic Test: HCCRecurrenceDiagnosticScore
- Registration Number
- NCT05866783
- Lead Sponsor
- University Hospital, Ghent
- Brief Summary
Liver transplantation (LT) is the only curative option for a selection of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) based on clinical selection criteria known as the Milan criteria. Nevertheless, 15% of these patients still show tumour recurrence after LT. In a monocentric pilot study, we have demonstrated that specific changes in N-glycan profiles (measured before LT) occur in HCC patients receiving LT1. These specific changes proved to be strongly associated with the risk of HCC recurrence and overall death after LT, independent of the criteria used for stringent patient selection. Pathophysiologically, it is known that abberations in protein glycosylation are involved in the onset en development of HCC. As such, a prognostic biomarker was developed that can clearly differentiate between patients with and without increased risk of HCC recurrence.
The primary goal of this research study is to set up a prospective, multicentre study in order to validate the prognostic value of this glycomics-based serum biomarker. As such, the risk of tumour recurrence in patients undergoing LT for HCC will be estimated independent from the Milan criteria and the French alpha-fetoprotein model as the current standard. The secondary goal is to explore the potential of serum glycomics as markers of early recurrence after LT for HCC. More specifically, we aim to investigate whether serial glycomics determination at fixed time points after LT could allow early detection of recurrent HCC even before it is visible on conventional imaging. Consequently, a diagnostic biomarker for monitoring early recurrence after LT could be developed with the potential of redirecting treatment strategies already in an early disease stage.
In case the promising data from the pilot study will be confirmed, the prognostic biomarker could be implemented in daily clinical practice leading to optimization of patient selection using a simple blood test before LT. More specifically, this marker could improve organ allocation thus preventing unnessecary treatment toxicity for the patient and reducing the costs of treatment for society. Moreover, it should be emphasized that a patent application was already submitted and accepted in collaboration with TechTranfer of Ghent University (PCT/EP2021/057788-Prognostic markers of disease recurrence in liver transplant recipients with hepatocellular carcinoma).
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 500
- Signed and dated patient informed consent document
- Diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma
- Age ≥ 18 years
- Ability to comply with protocol-specified evaluations and scheduled visits
- Eligible for liver transplantation and/or active on the waiting list for liver transplantation
- Consulted the department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology
- Diagnosis of other liver tumors (eg. liver metastasis, cholangiocarcinoma)
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description HCC recurrence HCCRecurrenceDiagnosticScore Patients receiving a liver transplantation that develop HCC recurrence after liver transplantation. No HCC recurrence HCCRecurrencePrognosticScore Patients receiving a liver transplantation that do NOT develop HCC recurrence after liver transplantation. HCC recurrence HCCRecurrencePrognosticScore Patients receiving a liver transplantation that develop HCC recurrence after liver transplantation. No HCC recurrence HCCRecurrenceDiagnosticScore Patients receiving a liver transplantation that do NOT develop HCC recurrence after liver transplantation.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method HCC recurrence 18 months Disease-free survival 18 months
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Overall survival 10 years
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Ghent University Hospital
🇧🇪Gent, Belgium