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Liver Cancer: Staging & Pathology Report

If there is suspicion that a patient may have liver cancer, a sample of tissue (biopsy) may be taken for examination. After a biopsy is taken, the physician who performed the biopsy sends the specimen to a pathologist. The pathologist examines the specimen at both the macroscopic (visible with the naked eye) and microscopic (requiring magnification) levels and then sends a pathology report to the physician. The report contains information about the tissue's appearance, cellular make up, and state of disease or normalcy. For more information about pathology reports, refer to theDiagnosis & Detection section.


A variety of staging systems have been used for liver cancer. T/N/M and the Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer staging system (BCLC) are the most common.(1)


The BCLC uses a four-stage system:
A. Includes patients with asymptomatic early tumors
B. Patients with asymptomatic multinodular HCC
C. Patients with symptomatic tumors and/or invasive tumor pattern
D. End stage disease. Should only receive symptomatic treatment


The T/N/M system assigns a degree of severity based on size, location, and spread of the cancer in the body. Learn more about T/N/M staging.

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Last Modified: 10/03/2011 Print Email Page Share
References for this page:
  1. Prognosis of Hepatocellular Carcinoma: The BCLC Staging Classification https://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.1055/s-2007-1007122 [https://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.1055/s-2007-1007122] [PUBMED]
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