PURPOSE: To retrospectively evaluate the long-term outcomes of patients treated with liver transplantation after neoadjuvant or induction transarterial chemoembolization using doxorubicin-eluting superabsorbent polymer microspheres and to assess risk factors associated with disease recurrence and death after transplantation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between January 2006 and April 2021, 286 patients underwent liver transplantation related to cirrhosis and early hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Demographic, angiographic imaging, and clinical follow-up data were collected from patients' electronic medical records. Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate disease-free survival. The prognostic effect of patient and disease characteristics on HCC recurrence was analyzed using logistic regression models. RESULTS: Fifty-three out of 286 patients (19%) underwent neoadjuvant or induction chemoembolization with doxorubicin-eluting superabsorbent polymer microspheres as bridging (n = 36) or as downstaging (n = 17) treatment. Time between diagnosis and liver transplantation was 311 days (range:225-440). Post-transplant follow-up revealed HCC recurrence in n = 1 (3%) and n = 4 (23.5%) patients in the bridging and downstaging groups, respectively, and disease-free survival at 5 years of 86% and 65% (p <
0.05) in the bridging and downstaging groups, respectively. Prognostic factors for post-transplant HCC recurrence include number of HCC lesions (p = 0.0088) and total tumor size (p = 0.0188) at diagnosis, as well as number of lesions (p = 0.0181) and largest tumor size (p = 0.0179) at explant analysis. CONCLUSION: Neoadjuvant or induction chemoembolization with doxorubicin-eluting superabsorbent polymer microspheres is associated with a low incidence of post-transplant HCC recurrence
number and total size of HCC lesions at diagnosis and at explant analysis are risk factors for post-transplant HCC recurrence.