4.5 Review

Utility of combining PIVKA-II and AFP in the sur- veillance and monitoring of hepatocellular carci- noma in the Asia-Pacific region

Journal

CLINICAL AND MOLECULAR HEPATOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages 277-292

Publisher

KOREAN ASSOC STUDY LIVER
DOI: 10.3350/cmh.2022.0212

Keywords

PIVKA-II; Alpha-fetoprotein; Carcinoma; hepatocellular; Consensus; Biomarkers

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PIVKA-II is valuable for detecting AFP-negative hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), and could be used in combination with AFP for early HCC detection. It is clinically useful for monitoring HCC treatment, predicting recurrence and microvascular invasion risk, and facilitating patient selection for liver transplant. However, more evidence is needed for its role in surveillance, including small HCC.
Even though the combined use of ultrasound (US) and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) is recommended for the surveillance of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the utilization of AFP has its challenges, including accuracy dependent on its cut-off levels, degree of liver necroinflammation, and etiology of liver disease. Though various studies have demonstrated the utility of protein induced by vitamin K absence II (PIVKA-II) in surveillance, treatment monitoring, and predicting recurrence, it is still not recommended as a routine biomarker test. A panel of 17 experts from Asia-Pacific, gathered to discuss and reach a consensus on the clinical usefulness and value of PIVKA-II for the surveillance and treatment monitoring of HCC, based on six predetermined statements. The experts agreed that PIVKA-II was valuable in the detection of HCC in AFP-negative patients, and could potentially benefit detection of early HCC in combination with AFP. PIVKA-II is clinically useful for monitoring curative and intra-arterial locoregional treatments, outcomes, and recurrence, and could potentially predict microvascular invasion risk and facilitate patient selection for liver transplant. However, combining PIVKA-II with US and AFP for HCC surveillance, including small HCC, still requires more evidence, whilst its role in detecting AFP-negative HCC will potentially increase as more patients are treated for hepatitis-related HCC. PIVKA-II in combination with AFP and US has a clinical role in the Asia-Pacific region for surveillance. However, implementation of PIVKA-II in the region will have some challenges, such as requiring standardization of cut-off values, its cost-effectiveness and improving awareness among healthcare providers. (Clin Mol Hepatol 2023;29:277-292)

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