Background: Intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) is important in the migration and adhesion of immune cells from the circulation to their targets. A circulating form of ICAM-1 (cICAM-1) is elevated in the serum of patients with hepatitis and various cancers. Our aim was to determine the clinical significance of cICAM-1 in chronic liver diseases and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
Methods: We measured the serum cICAM-1 levels in 91 patients with HCC, 47 with liver cirrhosis, 41 with chronic viral hepatitis and 32 healthy controls using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Ninety-eight patients had serial follow-up.
Results: The cICAM-1 levels in patients with HCC (737 +/- 212 ng/ml) and liver cirrhosis (593 +/- 145 ng/ml) were significantly higher than those in patients with chronic viral hepatitis (488 +/- 127 ng/ml) and controls (318 +/- 64 ng/ml). HCC patients had higher cICAM-1 levels than all the other groups. cICAM-1 levels in patients with chronic viral hepatitis correlated with serum alanine aminotransferase, prothrombin time and indocyanine green retention ratio. In HCC patients, alpha-fetoprotein levels and tumor size paralleled cICAM-1 concentrations. Furthermore, HCC patients with distant metastases had higher cICAM-1 levels than those without distant metastases, and levels of cICAM-1 in patients with stage IV HCC were higher than those in HCC patients with stages I, II or III disease. During a seven-year follow-up, 14 patients with chronic hepatitis developed liver cirrhosis when their cICAM-1 levels increased significantly. In 47 HCC patients, cICAM-1 levels decreased after tumor resection or transcatheter arterial embolization, and increased when the tumor recurred. cICAM-1 levels increased gradually in 14 patients with advanced HCC without specific therapy.
Conclusions: CICAM-1 levels are increased in patients with chronic hepatitis, liver cirrhosis and HCC. This reflects the severity and progression of chronic liver disease and HCC. Sequential measurements of cICAM-1 seem more valuable than a single-point assessment in evaluating the progress of liver disease.