Clinical News & Knowledge: Liver, Gallbladder & Biliary Tract Cancer
July 1, 2004
Oncology.
No. 8
The Daines/Rajagopalan/Grossard et al Article Reviewed
Gallbladder and Biliary Tract Carcinoma: A Comprehensive Update, Part 2
MARY F. MULCAHY, MD
Instructor in Medicine
AL B. BENSON III, MD, FACP
Professor of Medicine
Northwestern University
Division of Hematology/Oncology
Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive
Cancer Center
Chicago, Illinois
Cancers of the gallbladder and
bile ducts are uncommon, aggressive
malignancies that
present both a diagnostic and therapeutic
challenge. With an annual incidence
of 7,200 cases in the United
States, and the difficulty in diagnosing
biliary tract tumors, there is a paucity
of data supporting therapeutic
options. This comprehensive update
by Daines et al demonstrates the advances
in diagnostic and staging techniques,
which have led to appropriate
surgical resection. Despite these advances,
the prognosis of gallbladder
and cholangiocarcinoma remains bleak,
without significant improvement in survival,
contrary to the author's optimistic
introduction. There is a lack of active
chemotherapy and clinical trials exploring
adjuvant and palliative therapy.
Guidelines such as those advocated by
the National Comprehensive Cancer
Network (NCCN) help to establish standards
for the evaluation and treatment
of these uncommon tumors and provide
a framework for the development
of clinical trials.[1]
Diagnosis and Staging
The occurrence of gallbladder cancer
demonstrates a marked geographic
variation, which may relate to the
incidence of gallstones and obesity
among other risk factors. Over the
past few decades, the incidence and
mortality of gallbladder cancer has
decreased, possibly as a result of the
widespread use of cholecysectomy for
benign disease. Gallbladder cancer
may be discovered at the time of
surgery, on pathologic review, or
during evaluation for symptoms such
as an abdominal mass or jaundice.
Ultrasound is the most common radiographic
study used to assess gallbladder
disease. Findings that suggest
gallbladder cancer should be followed
by an evaluation for resectability. The
sixth edition of the American Joint
Committee on Cancer (AJCC) Staging
Manual has been updated to better
identify resectable, and therefore, potentially
curable gallbladder cancer.[2]
T3 lesion is one that invades one
adjacent organ, still allowing for surgical
resection, whereas a T4 lesion
invades the portal vein, hepatic artery,
or multiple organs precluding
resectability. The group staging reinforces
this distinction, identifying
stage II disease as resectable (IIa, T3,
N0 and IIb, T1-3, N1) and stage III
tumors as unresectable (T4, N0-1).
For tumors suspected prior to surgical
exploration, the diagnostic procedures
for staging gallbladder cancer are presented
in this paper.
Endoscopic ultrasound is not yet incorporated
into the NCCN guidelines
as a diagnostic and staging tool. This
technology can be invaluable in determining
extent of disease and identifying
lesions to biopsy. Identification of
distant lymph node involvement, such
as those in the body or tail region of the
pancreas, are consistent with metastatic
disease and can be readily and safely
identified by endoscopic ultrasound
with fine-needle aspiration.
Surgical Resection
The appropriate surgical resection
for gallbladder cancer involves an extended
cholecystectomy including
lymphadenectomy and consideration
of a partial hepatic resection and bile
duct excision. For gallbladder cancer
found at the time of surgical exploration,
this surgery would provide the
appropriate staging and therapy. Gallbladder
cancer found incidentally in
the pathology specimen to be invading
the muscle layer of the gallbladder
(T1b), or beyond, should be treated
with excision of the port sites in the
case of a laproscopic cholecystectomy
in addition to the extended resection.
The benefit of adjuvant therapy is
based on small phase II studies compared
to historic controls. As recommended
in the NCCN guidelines,
fluorouracil with radiation to the tumor
bed has suggested improved survival,
although randomized prospective studies
are lacking. Chemotherapeutic
agents are being explored that may offer
a greater benefit in eradicating micrometastatic
disease in the peritoneum
or the liver. As of yet, no agent has
demonstrated sufficient activity to be
pursued as adjuvant therapy.
Cholangiocarcinoma
Only a minority of cholangiocarcinomas
are diagnosed at a stage at
which surgical resection is possible.
Cholangiocarcinoma that arises in the
setting of primary sclerosing cholangitis
may be technically resectable;
however, the diseased liver usually
precludes resection. Most patients with
cholangiocarcinoma present with advanced
disease and concurrent liver
compromise. Percutaneous and endoscopic
biliary drainage procedures
have made it possible to relieve biliary
obstruction without surgical intervention
so that therapy can proceed.
Cholangiocarcinomas may arise
from the intrahepatic small-duct radicals,
or more commonly the extrahepatic
bile ducts, and are staged and
approached differently. Intrahepatic bile
duct cancer is staged according to AJCC
staging with primary hepatocellular
cancer. Surgically resectable tumors are
either solitary without vascular invasion
(stage I) or multiple but all less
than 5 cm (stage II), assuming liver
function is adequate to tolerate an anatomic
resection.[1] After complete resection,
there is no role for adjuvant
therapy outside of a clinical trial. If
complete resection is not possible, ablative
therapy with radiofrequency ablation
or cryotherapy can be considered,
although there are no studies demonstrating
a survival advantage.
Extrahepatic Bile Duct Cancer
Extrahepatic bile duct cancer includes
those of either the right or left
hepatic duct, the confluence of the right
and left hepatic duct (hilar), the common
hepatic duct, and the common
bile duct including the intrapancreatic
portion of the common bile duct. Tumor
that by radiographic evaluation involves
the main portal vein, the bilateral
branches of the portal vein, the common
hepatic artery, or organs other then
the liver, pancreas, or gallbladder are
considered T4 and unresectable by standard
surgical procedures. As with gallbladder
cancer, endoscopic ultrasound
can provide valuable information in regard
to lymph node staging.
Hilar carcinomas are the most common,
with only a small percentage
amenable to complete surgical resection.
Attempts to improve the rate of
resection have included preoperative
chemotherapy and irradiation (external-
beam or brachytherapy), and more
radical surgical procedures such as
liver transplant, especially in the setting
of primary sclerosing cholangitis.
Liver transplantation for cholangiocarcinoma
is highly controversial, given
the limited availability of organs
and the high rate of recurrence. The
addition of adjuvant therapy after
complete surgical resection or in the
setting of a liver transplant remains a
subject of clinical trials.
Systemic Therapy
Systemic therapy for gallbladder
and biliary tract cancers is an ongoing
pursuit. As summarized by Daines
et al, multiple phase II studies have
demonstrated response rates ranging
from 10% to 30%, but median overall
survival remains approximately 6 to
9 months. New agents are being explored
for the treatment of advanced
disease, and as emphasized in the
NCCN guidelines, clinical trial participation
is encouraged.
WILLIAM P. DAINES, VANDANA RAJAGOPALAN, MD, MICHAEL L. GROSSBARD, MD and PETER KOZUCH, MD
1. National Comprehensive Cancer Center
Practice Guidelines. Available at http://www.
nccn.org/physician_gls/f_guidelines. html.
Accessed June 2, 2004.
2. Green FL, Page DL, Fleming ID, et al:
AJCC Cancer Staging Manual, 6th ed, pp 139-
150. New York, Springer-Verlag, 2002.
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