| Literature DB >> 32742125 |
Daniele Dondossola1, Michele Ghidini2, Francesco Grossi2, Giorgio Rossi1, Diego Foschi3.
Abstract
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCC) is the most aggressive malignant tumor of the biliary tract. Perihilar CCC (pCCC) is the most common CCC and is burdened by a complicated diagnostic iter and its anatomical location makes surgical approach burden by poor results. Besides its clinical presentation, a multimodal diagnostic approach should be carried on by a tertiary specialized center to avoid miss-diagnosis. Preoperative staging must consider the extent of liver resection to avoid post-surgical hepatic failure. During staging iter, magnetic resonance can obtain satisfactory cholangiographic images, while invasive techniques should be used if bile duct samples are needed. Consistently, to improve diagnostic potential, bile duct drainage is not necessary in jaundice, while it is indicated in refractory cholangitis or when liver hypertrophy is needed. Once resecability criteria are identified, the extent of liver resection is secondary to the longitudinal spread of CCC. While in the past type IV pCCC was not considered resectable, some authors reported good results after their treatment. Conversely, in selected unresectable cases, liver transplantation could be a valuable option. Adjuvant chemotherapy is the standard of care for resected patients, while neoadjuvant approach has growing evidences. If curative resection is not achieved, radiotherapy can be added to chemotherapy. This multistep curative iter must be carried on in specialized centers. Hence, the aim of this review is to highlight the main steps and pitfalls of the diagnostic and therapeutic approach to pCCC with a peculiar attention to type IV pCCC. ©The Author(s) 2020. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Biliary drainage; Klatskin tumor; Liver resection; Neo-adjuvant therapy; Perihilar cholangiocarncioma; Type IV cholangiocarcinoma
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32742125 PMCID: PMC7366054 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v26.i25.3542
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Patients that should undergo to screening programs and the techniques that should be applied
| Intrahepatic lithiasis and recurrent pyogenic cholangitis | MR | Stenosis progression, distal bile duct dilatation, intraductal polypoid mass > 1 cm. |
| PSC | MR + ERCP | Irregular bile duct stenosis, bilateral bile duct dilatation, ipsilateral lobar atrophy. ERCP bile duct sampling can simplify differential diagnosis. |
| Intrahepatic fluke | US/MR | Central intrahepatic and main bile duct dilation with stenosis identification |
MR: Magnetic resonance; PSC: Primary sclerosing cholangitis; ERCP: Endoscopic retrograde pacreatoduodenoscopy; US: Ultrasound.
: Ultrasound, computed tomography and magnetic resonance findings for intrahepatic fluke are diffuse and uniform dilatation of peripheral intrahepatic bile ducts with no dilatation of central intrahepatic and main bile ducts, without focal obstruction lesions, with increased echogenity of bile ducts and non-shadowing echogenic foci within bile ducts (eggs or flukes).
Figure 1Schematic representation of extrahepatic and intrahepatic bile ducts (until second order) showing Bismuth-Corlette classification. CCC: Cholangiocarncioma.
Figure 2Diagnostic and therapeutic work-flow for perihilar cholangiocarncioma. 1If cytological confirmation is needed (negative carbohydrate antigen 19-9, positive immunoglobulin G4, and confounding diagnosis at imaging); interrupted line, consider neo-adjuvant therapies. US: Ultrasound; CT: Computed tomography; MR: Magnetic resonance; CA 19-9: Carbohydrate antigen 19-9; BIL: Bilirubin; IgG4: Immunoglobulin G4; ERCP: Endoscopic-retrograde-pancreatoduodenoscopy; EUS: Endoscopic ultrasound; FRL: Future remnant liver; PVE: Portal vein embolization; ALPPS: Associated liver partition to portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy; PTC: Percutaneous transhepatic colangiography; CHT: Chemotherapy; RT: Radiotherapy.
Main advantages of two the two techniques available to obtain bile duct drainage
| Internal stent: Less patient discomfort[ | External drainage: Increased patient discomfort[ |
| Reduced risk of seeding[ | Higher expertise needed[ |
| Higher rate of bacterial contamination/cholangitis[ | Higher rate of hemorrhage[ |
| “One shot” microbiological examination | Never cross the malignant bile duct stenosis[ |
| Removed during surgery | Repeated cholangiography and microbiological samples |
| Useful during and after surgery |
ERCP: Endoscopic retrograde pacreatoduodenoscopy; PTC: Percutaneous transhepatic colangiography.
Criteria that can be used to identify non-resectable patients
| Presence of distant metastasis (especially liver, lung, peritoneum) | Longitudinal and lateral dissemination | Consider adequate staging (avoid R1-2) |
| Extra-regional lymphnode involvement (para-aortic and extraperitoneal) | ||
| Bilateral intrahepatic involvement of biliary tree that exclude bilio-enteric anastomosis | Portal infiltration < 2 cm | Portal vein resection needed |
| Infiltration or occlusion of the main portal trunk proximal to bifurcation | ||
| Right lobe atrophy associated to contralateral portal vein infiltration or portal occlusion > 2 cm | Low remant liver | Consider liver hypertrophy techniques |
| Right lobe atrophy associated to contralateral tumor extension more than to 2 cm from hepatic hilum | ||
| Contralateral invasion of hepatic artery | Type IV pCCC | High expertise; consider en-bloc resection |
| Unilobar secondary bile ducts invasion associated to contralateral infiltration or collusion of portal vein | ||
pCCC: Perihilar cholangiocarncioma.
Articles reporting resection of type IV perihilar cholangiocarncioma according di bismuth
| Hu HJ | 2018 | NA | 69 | 52 | 14 | 63 | 39 | 57 | 86 | 76-44-22 |
| Li B | 2017 | NA | 142 | 42 | NA | NA | NA | 37 | 75 | 35-12-3 |
| Ebata T | 2018 | 50 | 216 | 131 | NA | 136 PV + 53 HA | 19 | 20 | 72 | 68-34-22 |
| Ji GW | 2017 | NA | 25 | 4 | 4 | 13 | 13 | 76 | 95 | NA |
| Hoffman K | 2015 | NA | 31 (+29 tipo II e III) | 31 | 21 | 19 | 52 | 36 | 60 | 84-38-18 |
| Han IW | 2014 | 21 | 33 | 6 | NA | 12 PV + 13 HA | NA | 36 | 54 | NA-28-NA |
| Cheng QB | 2012 | 61 | 101 (+75 tipo III) | NA | NA | NA | 25 | 40 | 76 | 89-38-13 |
We selected only the series were data on type IV resection can be extract.
Added type II and III cases.
All cases with presumed vascular infiltration had vascular resection, while only 19 cases had histological proven vascular infiltration.
Added type III cases. PV: Portal vein; HA: Hepatic artery. NA: Not applicable.