Comment on Ramai et al. Risk of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Patients with Porphyria: A Systematic Review. Cancers 2022, 14, 2947
- In the first statement of the discussion, the authors state that “patients with AHP had an estimated 5% risk of primary liver cancer”. This is incorrect, since the 5% risk estimate reflects the combined risk of the AHP and PCT cohorts. The risk in AHP is not assessed in this review.
- In the final paragraph of the discussion, the authors write that “This study provides further evidence to the current understanding of HCC in patients with AHP. This extensive review includes 19 studies from multiple countries, supporting screening guidelines in this patient population”. Again, only the term AHP is used. Only 12 of those 19 studies included patients with AHP, which makes the reference to AHP incorrect. Furthermore, PCT, the porphyria type included in nine of the studies, is not mentioned at all in the discussion. It is unclear whether the authors included the PCT studies erroneously as AHP, or if those studies were in fact not included in the final conclusions.
- The 103 cases in the Hardell study [12] are considered as the total cohort number. This is incorrect. In this case-control study, the population at risk was unknown and not mentioned in the original paper, and can therefore not be used to calculate incidence.
- According to Table 1 in the review [1], 335 cases from the Elder 2013 study [16] are included. This is incorrect. The Elder study was designed to assess the incidence and prevalence of different types of porphyria; 335 was the number of new cases of porphyrias in Europe during the study period, and not the study population from which the HCC cases were identified. No cohort was defined, and the cumulative incidence can therefore not be calculated from this study.
- The authors state that the porphyria cohort size in the study by Andersson 1996 [18] was 2122. This is highly inaccurate. The prevalence of AIP is high in the northernmost part of Sweden, but the total national number of AIP cases in Sweden is not more than approximately 1000 individuals [19]. The reported number (2122) represents all of the inhabitants who died in the studied municipalities during the study period. The AHP population size in the municipalities included is not mentioned in the original paper, but it is probably less than 300. Based on this error alone, the sum of individuals included in the denominator is overestimated by more than 1800.
- Concerning the Innala 2011 study [7], the stated study cohort size is 81, but this only represents one part of the cohort. The total cohort size was 180, clearly stated in the original paper.
- Concerning the Lang 2015 study [20], the stated study cohort size (122) is incorrect. The data on cancers were only available in 49 individuals, clearly stated in the original paper.
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References
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Section | Stated Text | Comment |
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Abstract (similar in the simple summary and introduction) | Subclinical liver disease is common, which can progress into transaminitis, fibrosis, cirrhosis, and malignancy | Although this is interesting, stating that liver disease is common and implying that fibrosis and cirrhosis are common in all porphyrias should be supported by evidence. |
Abstract | Its [the porphyrias] estimated prevalence nears 5 per 100,000 patients worldwide | The prevalence of the porphyrias cannot be generalized. The group includes ultra-rare porphyrias with only a few cases described in the world literature (ALAD-porphyria), rare porphyrias with a few hundred known cases worldwide (congenital erythropoietic porphyria), and those with unknown prevalence (X-liked erythropoietic porphyria). Of the types of porphyrias that are the focus of this review, the prevalence of PCT is 1/10,000 to 1/25,000, and the prevalence of AHP varies between different populations. The reference used is referring to a paper that refers to a book chapter based on outdated expert opinions. Our advice is to use epidemiological data from the Elder study [15]. Furthermore, the question of prevalence in porphyria is complex. Are all gene-carriers included, or only subjects with symptomatic disease? Definitions of what constitutes disease and of porphyria type are necessary in statements on prevalence and incidence. |
Abstract | “Porphyrias are inborn defects” | Most patients with PCT have the acquired form, not the inherited form. |
Introduction, third paragraph | “A recent European study reported an annual incidence of HCC 0.07%” and “would warrant surveillance in non-cirrhotic patients, supporting a rationale for an active surveillance program in this cohort” | The study [13] that the authors refer to actually states the opposite: “Therefore, surveillance cannot be currently recommended based on a PCT diagnosis alone.” |
Introduction | Acute hepatic porphyrias (AHP) are a group of four ultra-rare metabolic disorders | A disease is generally considered to be ultra-rare if it affects one patient per 50,000 people (or, fewer than 20 patients per million of population), and most ultra-rare diseases affect much fewer. Some porphyrias are considered ultra-rare (ALAD-porphyria for instance), but AHP (AIP, VP, and HCP) and PCT are not. |
Results, Table 1 | Porphyria subtype with liver cancer (column) | The percentage of porphyria subtypes vary between <1% and 88%. If true, this would be a significant finding. However, this column includes a random mix of cumulative incidences (numbers of patients with PLC/numbers at risk) and percentage of patients with PLC and a specific type of porphyria/total number of patients with PLC (e.g., Kauppinen 1992, Andersson 1996, Sardh 2013). The same way of presenting numbers should be used throughout this column. |
Results, Table 1 | Linet et al. Location: Denmark | This study was performed in Sweden and Denmark. All PLC cases were identified in Sweden [17]. |
Results, Table 1 | Andant et al. Location: Italy | This study was performed entirely in France [6]. |
Results, Table 1 | Elder et al. Design Retrospective. Location France. | This was a prospective study performed in a collaboration by 11 European Porphyria Centers [15]. France was indeed one of these, but no cases of liver cancer were reported from France; 11 were from Sweden and one each from the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland. |
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Lissing, M.; Vassiliou, D.; Harper, P.; Sardh, E.; Wahlin, S. Comment on Ramai et al. Risk of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Patients with Porphyria: A Systematic Review. Cancers 2022, 14, 2947. Cancers 2023, 15, 795. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15030795
Lissing M, Vassiliou D, Harper P, Sardh E, Wahlin S. Comment on Ramai et al. Risk of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Patients with Porphyria: A Systematic Review. Cancers 2022, 14, 2947. Cancers. 2023; 15(3):795. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15030795
Chicago/Turabian StyleLissing, Mattias, Daphne Vassiliou, Pauline Harper, Eliane Sardh, and Staffan Wahlin. 2023. "Comment on Ramai et al. Risk of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Patients with Porphyria: A Systematic Review. Cancers 2022, 14, 2947" Cancers 15, no. 3: 795. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15030795
APA StyleLissing, M., Vassiliou, D., Harper, P., Sardh, E., & Wahlin, S. (2023). Comment on Ramai et al. Risk of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Patients with Porphyria: A Systematic Review. Cancers 2022, 14, 2947. Cancers, 15(3), 795. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15030795