CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 · South Asian J Cancer 2018; 07(01): 24-26
DOI: 10.4103/sajc.sajc_82_17
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Gastro-intestinal & Hepatobiliary Cancer

Epidemiology of liver cancer in Nile delta over a decade: A single-center study

Sherief Abd-Elsalam
Department of Tropical Medicine & Infectious Diseases, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
,
Nadia Elwan
Department of Tropical Medicine & Infectious Diseases, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
,
Hanan Soliman
Department of Tropical Medicine & Infectious Diseases, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
,
Dina Ziada
Department of Tropical Medicine & Infectious Diseases, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
,
Walaa Elkhalawany
Department of Tropical Medicine & Infectious Diseases, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
,
Marwa Salama
Department of Tropical Medicine & Infectious Diseases, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
,
Nehad Hawash
Department of Tropical Medicine & Infectious Diseases, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
,
Mona Arafa
Department of Tropical Medicine & Infectious Diseases, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
,
Rehab Badawi
Department of Tropical Medicine & Infectious Diseases, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
,
Walaa M. Shehata
Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
,
Haidy S. Khalil
Department of Microbiology, Helwan University Faculty of Medicine, Cairo
,
Nehal Elmashad
Department of Medical Oncology, Tanta University Faculty of Medicine, Tanta
› Author Affiliations
Financial support and sponsorship Nil.

Abstract

Background: In Egypt, there has been a remarkable increase in the proportion of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) among chronic liver diseases patients. This rising proportion may be explained by the increasing risk factors as hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, improvement of the diagnostic tools of HCC as well as the extended survival among patients with cirrhosis to allow time for some of them to develop HCC. The aim of this study was to study the epidemiology of HCC in Nile delta over the last decade. Methods: The study was carried out on patients diagnosed as HCC in liver cancer clinic in Tanta University Hospital, Egypt, from January 2005 to January 2015. This retrospective study reviewed the files of HCC patients with special stress on age, sex, residence, occupation, smoking, and viral markers. Results: Over the last decade, 1440 HCC patients were diagnosed or referred to liver cancer clinic in Tropical Medicine Department in Tanta University Hospital from January 2005 to January 2015. The mean age of HCC patients was 56.13 ± 9.53 years. Nearly, half of the patients with HCC were smokers and quarter of HCC patients were diabetics. HBV surface antigen-positive patients were only 3.26%, and the majority of patients were HCV-Ab positive (94.86% of patients). Conclusions: In Nile delta, hepatitis C rather than hepatitis B was linked to the development of HCC in our region which may be related to the high prevalence of HCV in this area.



Publication History

Article published online:
22 December 2020

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