Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Serum transforming growth factor-alpha level can be a parameter for evaluating liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy in patients with liver cancer.

12

Citations

0

References

1997

Year

Abstract

Sensitive and reliable laboratory parameters are necessary to evaluate the degree of liver regeneration serially in patients after partial hepatectomy for liver cancer. We evaluated the serum levels of transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha) and hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), both of which are potent mitogens for hepatocytes, in 22 hepatectomized patients with liver cancer: 10 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and 12 patients with metastatic liver tumors. Ten patients who underwent laparotomy for nonhepatic surgery were also studied as surgical controls. The serum TGF-alpha and HGF levels were measured by sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay techniques. Both the serum TGF-alpha and HGF levels increased after partial hepatectomy. However, there was no correlation between the levels of TGF-alpha and HGF. The maximal level of TGF-alpha achieved in each case correlated significantly with the resected liver volume and the increased volume of the remaining liver. Hepatocyte growth factor showed no such correlations. After nonhepatic surgery, the HGF level also increased significantly, while the TGF-alpha level did not. These results suggest that the serum TGF-alpha level varies depending on the regenerative stimulus to the liver, and that its increase corresponds with the degree of liver regeneration that occurs in patients after partial hepatectomy for liver cancer. In contrast, it is unlikely that the serum HGF level reflects liver regeneration. In conclusion, the serum TGF-alpha level can be used as a parameter for evaluating liver regeneration in patients who have undergone partial hepatectomy.