Background
This study evaluated the relationship between inflammation, intra-hepatic oxidative stress, oxidative DNA damage and the progression
of liver carcinogenesis in hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected humans.
Methods
Non-cancerous liver tissues were collected from 30 patients with an HCV-associated solitary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
who received curative tumor removal. After surgery, the patients were followed at monthly intervals at the outpatient clinic.
Distribution of the inflammatory cells (CD68+), the number of 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) DNA adducts and 4-hydroxynonenal
(HNE) protein adducts and the expression of apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (APE) were determined by immunohistochemical
analysis in serial liver sections from tumor-free parenchyma at the surgical margin around the tumor.
Results
Significant positive correlations were observed between the number of CD68+ cells, the amount of HNE protein adducts, and
the number of 8-OHdG adducts in liver tissue of patients with HCC and HCV. The cumulative disease-free survival was significantly
shorter in patients with the highest percentage of 8-OHdG-positive hepatocytes. Using a Cox proportional hazard model, 8-OHdG,
HNE and CD68 were determined to be good biomarkers for predicting disease-free survival in patients with HCC and HCV.
Conclusions
These results support the hypothesis that HCV-induced inflammation causes oxidative DNA damage and promotes hepatocarcinogenesis
which directly affects the clinical outcome. Since patients with greater intra-hepatic oxidative stress had a higher incidence
of HCC recurrence, we suggest that oxidative stress biomarkers could potentially be used as a useful clinical diagnostic tool
to predict the duration of disease-free survival in patients with HCV-associated HCC.
Keywords Hepatocellular carcinoma - Hepatitis C virus - Oxidative stress - Disease - free survival