By James Myhre & Dennis Sifris, MD 

Medically reviewed by Isabel Casimiro, MD, PhD

Diabetes can affect multiple organs, including the liver. Over time, the damaging effects of diabetes can cause the scarring of liver tissues and the gradual loss of liver function. In some people, the mounting damage can lead to hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the most common form of liver cancer.1

Both type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes can independently increase the risk of liver cancer. Research indicates that people with diabetes are two to three times more likely to develop HCC than people without. The risk is further increased if diabetes is poorly controlled or left untreated.1

This article looks at the connection between diabetes and liver cancer, including how high blood sugar can cause changes in the liver that lead to cancer. It also describes how liver cancer is treated in people with diabetes and ways to reduce your risk if you've been diagnosed with either type 1 or type 2 diabetes.

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Connection Between Diabetes and Liver Cancer

Diabetes is caused by the disruption of a hormone called insulin, which the body uses to regulate blood sugar (glucose). When insufficient insulin is produced, or the body does not respond to insulin as it should, glucose levels can rise to unhealthy levels. This is known as hyperglycemia.2

With hyperglycemia, the body has more glucose than it needs to fuel cells. The excess glucose will, instead, undergo a process known as oxidation, during which harmful chemicals, called free radicals, are released into the bloodstream.3

Under normal circumstances, free radicals are controlled by nutrients known as antioxidants. But, with uncontrolled diabetes, free radical levels can rapidly exceed antioxidant levels and cause damage to cells and tissues throughout the body.3

When the liver is affected, the damage caused by diabetes will often progress in the following stages:3

  1. Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD): This is often an asymptomatic (symptom-free) condition that causes fatty deposits to accumulate in the liver. MASLD was formerly known as nonalcoholic fatty liver disease or NAFLD.

  2. Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH): This is a severe form of MASLD in which the fatty deposits cause progressive scarring of the liver, known as fibrosis. MASH was formerly known as nonalcoholic steatohepatitis or NASH.

  3. Compensated cirrhosis: This is when fibrosis starts to interfere with the function of the liver.

  4. Decompensated cirrhosis: This is when fibrosis severely damages the liver, causing it to fail.

  5. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC): This is the most common form of liver cancer and the most common cause of death in people with cirrhosis.4

How HCC Differs in People with Diabetes

HCC tends to be more aggressive in people with diabetes, partly because glucose helps "fuel" a tumor's growth. Studies have shown that cancer cells consume a tremendous amount of glucose compared to normal cells. When diabetes is involved, high glucose levels can accelerate the growth and spread of liver cancer.5

As a result, diabetes can significantly reduce survival times in people with liver cancer by as much as 50%.6

Diabetes also increases the risk of cancer recurrence (relapse) in people with HCC, often within the three years following curative treatment.7

Risks

Cirrhosis is the leading risk factor linked to the development of HCC in people with diabetes and those without.

A review of studies concluded that people with MASLD or MASH have a minimal risk of HCC if they do not progress to cirrhosis. By contrast, those with cirrhosis have as much as a 1 in 8 chance of getting HCC, depending on the severity of their liver damage.8

Blood Sugar and Liver Cancer Risk

Blood glucose levels also influence the risk of HCC in people with diabetes. A 2021 study from Korea involving 674,178 adults with diabetes found the risk of HCC increases in tandem with increases in blood glucose values.9

This means that people who are better able to control their blood sugar over the long term generally have a lower risk of HCC than those who don't.

Based on the current evidence, the following four factors are directly linked to an increased risk of HCC in people with diabetes:

  • Older age (with the risk increasing with each decade)10

  • Longer duration of diabetes11

  • Severe cirrhosis (characterized by low blood albumin levels)10

  • Poor blood glucose control9

While cigarette smoking, obesity, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and high alcohol intake are not directly linked to an increased risk of HCC in people with diabetes, they can indirectly increase the risk by promoting the onset (or worsening) of cirrhosis.12

Treatment and Management of Diabetes and Liver Cancer

The treatment of liver cancer is the same for people with diabetes as for those without. Depending on how advanced the cancer is—classified by the cancer stage—the treatment may involve:

  • Partial hepatectomy: This is the surgical removal of the cancerous part of the liver. Partial hepatectomy is typically reserved for people with early (stage 1) liver cancer and, sometimes, locally advanced (stage 2) liver cancer.

  • Ablation or embolization: Ablation involves the destruction of a tumor with cold, microwave energy, alcohol injections, or high-frequency radiowaves. Embolization shrinks a tumor by blocking its blood supply. These may be used alone or together when a tumor is inoperable.

  • Liver transplant: A liver transplant is an option if the cancer has not spread beyond the liver. This may be used in the early stages if a tumor cannot be removed due to its location or if other parts of the liver are severely damaged by cirrhosis.

  • Chemotherapy or radiotherapy: Chemotherapy involves using drugs that kill fast-growing cells, while radiotherapy destroys cancer with high doses of radiation. These may be used if a tumor is operable or to help shrink a tumor before a transplant or partial hepatectomy.

  • Immunotherapy or targeted therapy: Immunotherapy involves drugs that stimulate the immune system to fight cancer, while targeted therapies involve drugs that target cancer cells without affecting normal ones. These are used when cancer has spread (metastasized) beyond the liver.

Maintaining optimal blood sugar control is equally important if you have diabetes. Doing so lowers the risk of cancer recurrence and increases survival times.

According to a 2013 study, 92% of people who maintained optimal blood sugar control after liver cancer treatment lived for at least three years, compared to only 70% of those who did not.13

Metformin and Liver Cancer Survival

Studies have shown the diabetes drug metformin is beneficial to people with diabetes and liver cancer, increasing survival times by 64% compared to those who did not receive the drug.14

Prevention

The first step toward liver cancer prevention in people with diabetes is the avoidance of MASLD. This can be difficult given 50% to 75% of people with type 2 diabetes have MASLD (largely due to high rates of obesity in the U.S. population).15

To reduce the risk of MASLD—and, in turn, HCC—people with diabetes are advised to:16

  • Lose weight if overweight or having obesity (ideally through diet and exercise)

  • Reduce sugar consumption (including the excessive intake of fructose)

  • Lower consumption of red meat and fatty foods

  • Avoid or reduce alcohol intake

  • Tighten blood sugar control with diabetes medications

Some diabetes drugs are better at preventing HCC than others.

Chief among these is metformin, most commonly used in the first-line treatment of type 2 diabetes. Studies have shown that metformin not only improves survival times in people with HCC but can also reduce the risk of getting HCC if you are diagnosed with diabetes.

Metformin and the Prevention of HCC

A 2013 review of studies concluded that metformin could cut the risk of HCC by half in people with diabetes.17 The benefits are greatest when metformin treatment begins before significant liver damage.18

By contrast, insulin and sulfonylureas are linked to an increased risk of HCC (likely because the drugs are used for advanced stages of diabetes once liver damage has already occurred).17

Another class of drugs that may help reduce the risk of HCC in people with diabetes is statins. These include medications like Pravachol (pravastatin) and Lipitor (atorvastatin), commonly used to treat high cholesterol.

For reasons that are not entirely clear, statins appear to inhibit the formation of cancerous tumors and may reduce the risk of HCC by as much as 44% in people with diabetes.19

Liver Cancer Screening

The American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) recommends liver cancer screening every six months for people with cirrhosis. This involves an abdominal ultrasound with or without supporting blood tests.20

Summary

Diabetes can independently increase the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the most common form of liver cancer. It does so by causing the progressive scarring of liver tissues and the gradual loss of liver function (collectively called cirrhosis).

Cirrhosis is the leading cause of HCC, but other risk factors can contribute, including older age, poor blood sugar control, and having diabetes for a longer time.

The treatment of liver cancer is the same for people with diabetes as for anyone else. With that said, it is essential to maintain control of your blood sugar to improve your chances of survival.

The diabetes drug metformin is especially good at this, not only at extending survival times by 64% in people with HCC but also reducing the risk of HCC in people with diabetes by 44%.

Sources

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Mohamed J, Nazratun Nafizah AH, Zariyantey Ah, et al. Mechanisms of diabetes-induced liver damage: the role of oxidative stress and inflammation. Sultan Qaboos Univ Med J. 2016;16(2):e132–e141. doi:10.18295/squmj.2016.16.02.002

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Additional Reading

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CKD risk factors and prevention.

MedlinePlus. How to prevent diabetes.

By James Myhre & Dennis Sifris, MD
Dr. Sifris is an HIV specialist and Medical Director of LifeSense Disease Management. Myhre is a journalist and HIV educator.