Background and aims: HCC recurrence frequently occurs after curative surgery. Histological microvascular invasion (MVI) predicts recurrence but cannot provide preoperative prognostication, whereas clinical prediction scores have variable performances.
Approach and results: Recurr-NET, a multimodal multiphasic residual-network random survival forest deep-learning model incorporating preoperative CT and clinical parameters, was developed to predict HCC recurrence. Preoperative triphasic CT scans were retrieved from patients with resected histology-confirmed HCC from 4 centers in Hong Kong (internal cohort). The internal cohort was randomly divided in an 8:2 ratio into training and internal validation. External testing was performed in an independent cohort from Taiwan.Among 1231 patients (age 62.4y, 83.1% male, 86.8% viral hepatitis, and median follow-up 65.1mo), cumulative HCC recurrence rates at years 2 and 5 were 41.8% and 56.4%, respectively. Recurr-NET achieved excellent accuracy in predicting recurrence from years 1 to 5 (internal cohort AUROC 0.770-0.857; external AUROC 0.758-0.798), significantly outperforming MVI (internal AUROC 0.518-0.590; external AUROC 0.557-0.615) and multiple clinical risk scores (ERASL-PRE, ERASL-POST, DFT, and Shim scores) (internal AUROC 0.523-0.587, external AUROC: 0.524-0.620), respectively (all p < 0.001). Recurr-NET was superior to MVI in stratifying recurrence risks at year 2 (internal: 72.5% vs. 50.0% in MVI; external: 65.3% vs. 46.6% in MVI) and year 5 (internal: 86.4% vs. 62.5% in MVI; external: 81.4% vs. 63.8% in MVI) (all p < 0.001). Recurr-NET was also superior to MVI in stratifying liver-related and all-cause mortality (all p < 0.001). The performance of Recurr-NET remained robust in subgroup analyses.
Conclusions: Recurr-NET accurately predicted HCC recurrence, outperforming MVI and clinical prediction scores, highlighting its potential in preoperative prognostication.
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