Liver and Intestinal Transplantation Activity in Australia and New Zealand Data to 31 December 2020 15 Liver Transplantation and Cancer Cancer in liver transplant recipients Type of liver cancers as a primary diagnosis ID: 913387
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32nd Annual Report on Liver and Intestinal Transplantation Activityin Australia and New ZealandData to 31 December 2020
Slide215 Liver Transplantation and Cancer
Slide3Cancer in liver transplant recipients
Slide4Type of liver cancers as a primary diagnosis
Slide5Patient survival curve for patients with a primary diagnosis of liver cancer
Slide6Patient survival curve for patients with a primary diagnosis of liver cancer by type of cancer
Slide7Incidence of patients with liver cancer as a primary diagnosis by era
Slide8Type of liver cancers as a secondary / incidental diagnosis
Slide9Patient survival curve for patients with a secondary / incidental diagnosis of liver cancer
Slide10Patient survival curve for patients with secondary / incidental diagnosis of liver cancer by type of cancer
Slide11Types of liver cancer (primary or secondary / incidental diagnosis) at transplantation
Slide12Patient survival – pretransplant benign disease versus pretransplant liver malignancy
Slide13Hepatocellular carcinoma versus other liver cancers at transplantation by era
Slide14Hepatocellular carcinoma status at transplant by era
Slide15Patient survival of hepatocellular carcinoma by era
Slide16Patient survival of hepatocellular carcinoma status at transplant
Slide17De novo non-skin cancer types
*
37
patients developed more than 1 non-skin cancer post-transplant
Slide18De novo non-skin cancer types
Slide19De novo non-skin cancer types – gender versus death outcome
Slide20Time to diagnosis of de novo non-skin cancer
Slide21Time to diagnosis of any non-skin cancer by age category
Slide22Pretransplant diagnosis and de novo non-skin cancer types
Slide23Hepatitis C virus and alcohol diagnosis and types of de novo skin cancer
Slide24Pretransplant diagnosis and de novo alimentary cancers
Slide25Incidence of de novo alimentary tract cancers by type
Slide26Time to diagnosis of de novo lymphoma by age category
Slide27Pretransplant diagnosis and de novo genitourinary cancers
Slide28Incidence of de novo genitourinary tract cancers by type
Slide29Pretransplant diagnosis and de novo respiratory cancers
* 1 patient had 2
respiratory
cancers
Slide30Incidence of de novo respiratory tract cancers by type
Slide31Time to first skin cancer development post-transplant by type of skin cancer
Slide32Time to first melanoma development post-transplant
Slide33Time to any skin cancer development post-transplant
Slide34Skin cancer development post-transplant
* Note: Some patients developed more than one skin cancer type. 968 patients developed 5,308 skin cancers
Slide35Cumulative risk of diagnosis of skin or non-skin cancer following liver transplantation