The Fatty Liver, Cirrhosis, and Liver Cancer Study (TENDENCY): Protocol for a Multicenter Case-Control Study
Author
Hussain YBannaga A
Fisher N
Krishnamoorthy A
Kimani P
Malik A
Truslove M
Joshi S
Hitchins M
Abbasi A
Corbett C
Brookes M
Randeva H
Than NN
Arasaradnam RP.
Affiliation
University Hospitals Coventry & Warwickshire; The Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust; University of Warwick.Publication date
2023-05-31Subject
Gastroenterology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Hepatocellular cancer (HCC) is associated with high mortality, and early diagnosis leads to better survival. Patients with cirrhosis, especially due to nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and viral hepatitis, are at higher risk of developing HCC and form the main screening group. The current screening methods for HCC (6-monthly screening with serum alpha fetoprotein and ultrasound liver) have low sensitivity; hence, there is a need for better screening markers for HCC. Our study, TENDENCY, aims to validate the novel screening markers (methylated septin 9, urinary volatile organic compounds, and urinary peptides) for HCC diagnosis and study these noninvasive biomarkers in liver disease. This is a multicenter, nested case-control study, which involves comparing the plasma levels of methylated septin 9 between confirmed HCC cases and patients with cirrhosis (control group). It also includes the comparison of urine samples for the detection of HCC-specific volatile organic compounds and peptides. Based on the findings of a pilot study carried out at University Hospital Coventry & Warwickshire, we estimated our sample size to be 308 (n=88, 29% patients with HCC; n=220, 71% patients with cirrhosis). Urine and plasma samples will be collected from all participants and will be frozen at -80 �C until the end of recruitment. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry will be used for urinary volatile organic compounds detection, and capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry will be used for urinary peptide identification. Real-time polymerase chain reaction will be used for the qualitative detection of plasma methylated septin 9. The study will be monitored by the Research and Development department at University Hospital Coventry & Warwickshire. The recruitment stage was completed in March 2023. The TENDENCY study is currently in the analysis stage, which is expected to finish by November 2023. There is lack of effective screening tests for hepatocellular cancer despite higher mortality rates. The application of more sensitive plasma and urinary biomarkers for hepatocellular cancer screening in clinical practice will allow us to detect the disease at earlier stages and hence, overall, improve HCC outcomes.Citation
Hussain Y, Bannaga A, Fisher N, Krishnamoorthy A, Kimani P, Malik A, Truslove M, Joshi S, Hitchins M, Abbasi A, Corbett C, Brookes M, Randeva H, Than NN, Arasaradnam RP. The Fatty Liver, Cirrhosis, and Liver Cancer Study (TENDENCY): Protocol for a Multicenter Case-Control Study. JMIR Res Protoc. 2023 May 31;12:e44264. doi: 10.2196/44264. PMID: 37256650; PMCID: PMC10267778.DOI
10.2196/44264PMID
37256650Publisher
JMIR Publicationsae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.2196/44264