Background/aims: The clinical usefulness of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) in the management of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains controversial. This study aimed to assess the prognostic reliability of serum AFP levels per tumor volume (AFP/volume) after curative resection.
Methodology: A total of 196 patients with HCC were analyzed with reference to serum AFP levels at diagnosis. Clinicopathological data included presence of cirrhosis, indocyanine green retention rate (ICGR15), tumor size and number of HCCs. Tumor volume for HCCs was calculated preoperatively by Computed tomography volumetry, and AFP/volume was calculated by dividing serum AFP level by tumor volume.
Results: No significant correlation between serum AFP levels and presence of cirrhosis or ICGR15 was observed. A significant correlation existed between serum AFP levels and both size (P=0.001, r=0.276) and number (P=0.023, r=0.186) of HCCs. The 5-year survival rates in patients with low (< 200 ng/mL) and high (> or = 200 ng/mL) serum AFP level were 85.0% and 36.0%, respectively. AFP/volume tended to be negatively associated with survival period (p=0.084, r = -0.346), and a significant negative correlation existed between AFP/volume and disease-free survival period (p=0.001, r = -0.347). Median values of AFP/ volume in patients who displayed recurrence by 1 year and 6 months were 11.51 and 20.05, respectively.
Conclusions: AFP/volume represents a better prognostic indicator for patients with HCC than serum AFP value alone. In particular, patients with AFP/volume > 20.0 are likely to experience recurrence within 6 months after curative hepatectomy.