Gallbladder carcinoma is an aggressive, rapidly fatal disease unless
discovered at an early stage.The symptoms of gallbladder cancer are
typically those of benign gallbladder disease.Given the nonspecific
presentation of patients with gallbladder carcinoma, the disease is
difficult to diagnose preoperatively.Unfortunately, there are no
reliable tumor markers too. A review of risk factors for the
development of Gallbladder Carcinoma (GBC), clinical findings and
possible diagnostic modalities has been posted, here is the post copy:

Sunday, June 15, 2008
Gallbladder carcinoma

In the United States, Gallbladder Carcinoma (GBC) is the fifth most common 
gastrointestinal (GI) cancer, and the most common involving the biliary tract; 
fewer than 5000 new cases are diagnosed each year in the United States.

    * The majority are found incidentally in patients undergoing exploration 
for cholelithiasis; a tumor will be found in 1 to 2 percent of such cases.
    * The poor prognosis associated with GBC is thought related to advanced 
stage at diagnosis, which is due both to the anatomic position of the 
gallbladder, and the vagueness and nonspecificity of symptoms.

EPIDEMIOLOGY

    * High rates of GBC are seen in South American countries, particularly 
Chile, Bolivia, and Ecuador, as well as some areas of India, Pakistan, Japan 
and Korea.

          o In Chile, mortality rates from GBC are the highest in the world.
          o These populations all share a high prevalence of gallstones and/or 
salmonella infection, both recognized risk factors for GBC.

    * Worldwide, there is a prominent geographic variability in GBC incidence 
that correlates with the prevalence of cholelithiasis.

Gallbladder carcinoma affects women three times more often than men and its 
incidence increases steadily with age, with a steep rise beyond the age of 
sixty.

    * The incidence of gallbladder cancer is higher in certain ethnic groups, 
mirroring the incidence of cholelithiasis in these groups.
    * Alaskan and American Indian natives have a frequency of gallbladder 
cancer that is six times that of the rest of the country.
    * GBC is more common in Caucasians than in blacks

In the United States, however, the incidence and mortality rates of gallbladder 
cancer have been decreasing since 1970, related at least in part to increasing 
numbers of cholecystectomies performed annually for gallbladder disease in the 
United States.

RISK FACTORS
Gallstone disease

    * Gallstones are present in 70 to 90 percent of patients with GBC, and a 
history of gallstones appears to be one of the strongest risk factors for the 
development of GBC.
    * Despite the increased risk of GBC in patients with gallstones, the 
overall incidence of GBC in patients with cholelithiasis is only 0.5 to 3 
percent.
    * The risk is higher with larger gallstones (in one study, patients with 
stones larger than 3 cm had a 10-fold higher risk of GBC compared to those with 
stones <1>

Cholecystoenteric fistula

    * There is a 15% incidence of gallbladder cancer in patients with a history 
of a cholecystoenteric fistula and the presence of Mirizzi’s syndrome.

Porcelain gallbladder

    * Porcelain gallbladder is an uncommon manifestation of chronic 
cholecystitis that is characterized by intramural calcification of the 
gallbladder wall.
    * It is associated with cholelithiasis in more than 95 percent of cases.
    * As with other gallstone-related conditions, these patients are at 
increased risk of GBC.
    * The reported incidence of GBC in patients with a porcelain gallbladder 
ranges from 12.5 to 60 percent.

Gallbladder polyps

    * Gallbladder polyps are outgrowths of the gallbladder mucosal wall that 
can be benign or malignant, and benign lesions are further classified as 
nonneoplastic (eg, cholesterol and inflammatory polyps, adenomyomas) or 
neoplastic (eg, adenomas, leiomyomas).

    * The most common benign neoplastic lesion is an adenoma, a glandular tumor 
composed of cells resembling biliary tract epithelium.
    * It is unclear whether adenomatous polyps represent a premalignant lesion, 
and if so, the frequency with which they progress to carcinoma.
    * Unlike GBC, gallbladder polyps tend not to occur in patients with 
cholelithiasis, chronic inflammation is generally absent, and cancer-related 
molecular changes that are seen in GBCs have not been identified in adenomas.
    * Nevertheless, larger polyps are more likely to contain foci of invasive 
cancer, and some studies suggest a correlation between the presence of 
gallbladder polyps and the risk of GBC.

Chronic infection

    * Salmonella

          o In endemic settings, approximately 1 to 4 percent of acutely 
infected individuals become chronic asymptomatic carriers of salmonella typhi 
(S. typhi).
          o Several reports suggest an association between chronic S. typhi 
carriage and elevated risk of GBC.
          o A prospective case control study of patients with carcinoma of the 
gallbladder and gallstones (cases) or gallstones alone (controls) identified 
the S. typhi carrier state as an independent risk factor for carcinoma of the 
gallbladder (OR=14).
          o Because chronic carriage occurs more often in individuals with 
cholelithiasis, gallstones are thought to represent a potential nidus for 
ongoing infection.

    * Helicobacter

          o Helicobacter colonization of the biliary epithelium (particularly 
H. bilis) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of gallbladder disease 
including gallbladder cancer based upon detection of Helicobacter-derived 
cytotoxins and surface proteins using sensitive molecular and 
immunohistochemical techniques.
          o The strength of this association requires further clarification.

Congenital biliary cysts

    * Biliary cysts are associated with an increased risk of cancer, 
particularly cholangiocarcinoma.
    * The incidence of malignancy varies with age.
    * In a 1983 review of all published series of biliary cysts, the incidence 
of cancer was 0.7 percent in patients under 10 years of age, 6.8 percent in 
patients 11 to 20 years of age, and 14.3 percent in patients over 20 years of 
age.
    * An incidence as high as 50 percent has been reported in older patients.
    * At least one study suggests that the increased incidence of carcinoma in 
biliary cysts is confined to patients with an anomalous pancreaticobiliary duct 
junction.

Abnormal pancreaticobiliary duct junction

    * Anomalous pancreaticobiliary duct junction is a rare anatomic variation 
in which the pancreatic duct drains into the common bile duct, resulting in a 
long common channel (usually over 2 cm in length).
    * This condition may represent failure of the embryological ducts to 
migrate fully into the duodenum.
    * This condition is most prevalent in Asians populations, mostly Japanese.

The long common channel may predispose to reflux of pancreatic juice into the 
biliary tree, since the ductal junction lies outside of the sphincter of Oddi.

    * Elevated sphincter of Oddi pressures have been documented in anomalous 
pancreaticobiliary duct junction, and could also promote pancreaticobiliary 
reflux.
    * The result is increased amylase levels in bile, intraductal activation of 
proteolytic enzymes, alterations in bile composition, and presumed biliary 
epithelial damage, inflammation, ductal distension, and cyst formation.

    * Anomalous pancreaticobiliary duct junction appears to increase the risk 
of biliary and pancreatic malignancy even in patients without a biliary cyst or 
ductal dilation.
    * Gallbladder cancer is the most common malignancy seen in patients with 
anomalous pancreaticobiliary duct junction and no bile duct cyst.
    * As a result, prophylactic cholecystectomy is recommended in affected 
patients.

The molecular pathogenesis of GBC arising in patients with an anomalous 
pancreaticobiliary duct junction appears to be different from that underlying 
the development of GBC in the setting of gallstone disease.

Medications

Some drugs have also been implicated in biliary carcinogenesis, including

    * methyledopa,
    * oral contraceptives, and
    * isoniazid.

Others have found no convincing evidence for an association between oral 
contraceptive use and GBC.

Carcinogen exposure

    * Evidence is accumulating that carcinogen exposure may also be involved in 
the etiology of GBC. An increased risk of GBC has been described in workers in 
the oil, paper, chemical, shoe, textile, and cellulose acetate fiber 
manufacturing industries, and in miners exposed to radon.

MOLECULAR PATHOGENESIS

Differences in the demographics, clinical presentation, and gender distribution 
suggest that there are two key pathways to developing GBC in patients with 
cholelithiasis and anomalous pancreaticobiliary duct junction.

The main mechanism involves cholelithiasis and resultant cholecystitis, and 
seems to be the driving force in most regions of the world where GBC is 
strongly associated with gallstone disease, female gender bias, and age over 65.

    * It is hypothesized that chronic irritation of the gallbladder mucosa over 
a period of years may predispose to malignant transformation, or act as a 
promoter for carcinogenic exposure or genetic predisposition.
    * In keeping with this hypothesis, bile samples from patients in endemic 
areas are more mutagenic than those from patients from low incidence areas.
    * Despite these data, there is no conclusive evidence linking bile 
composition to GBC.

A second mechanism involves anomalous pancreaticobiliary duct junction, which 
is associated with a relatively high proportion of cases of GBC in Japan.

    * Cancers associated with this condition occur at a younger age, show less 
female gender bias, and have a lower incidence of associated cholelithiasis.

    * There are also histologic and molecular differences in GBCs associated 
with an anomalous pancreaticobiliary duct junction and those associated with 
gallstones, providing further evidence that two distinct pathogenetic pathways 
are involved.

          o GBCs arising in Japan in the setting of an anomalous 
pancreaticobiliary duct junction are characterized by K-ras mutations and 
relatively late onset of p53 mutations.
          o By contrast, in Chilean patients with cholelithiasis and chronic 
cholecystitis, K-ras mutations are rare, while p53 mutations arise early during 
multistage pathogenesis.

Multistage pathogenesis

Most epithelial cancers are preceded by a series of histologic and molecular 
changers that evolve over a period of several years or decades.

    * Similar to other GI tract adenocarcinomas, adenocarcinomas involving the 
gallbladder progress from dysplasia, to carcinoma in situ (CIS), and then to 
invasive cancer.
    * The molecular changes that characterize these sequential changes are less 
well characterized than those in colorectal cancer.

    * Preneoplastic changes can be found in the mucosa adjacent to over 90 
percent of GBCs, and they are relatively frequent in routine cholecystectomy 
specimens.
    * The entire sequence appears to take approximately 15 years.
    * metaplasia is a rare premalignant lesion found in association with 
invasive squamous cell GBC.

By contrast, in both adults and children with an anomalous pancreaticobiliary 
duct junction, epithelial hyperplasia with a papillary or villous appearance is 
present in 39 to 61 percent of cases, and is thought to represent a 
premalignant histologic change in the gallbladder mucosa. Hyperplasia then 
progresses to dysplasia, similar to the usual form of GBC.

CLINICAL FEATURES

The symptoms of gallbladder cancer are typically those of benign gallbladder 
disease. Common symptoms include right upper quadrant abdominal pain, nausea, 
and fatty food intolerance.
More advanced symptoms include jaundice, anorexia, and weight loss.

Rarely, patients present with extraabdominal metastases, hepatomegaly, a 
palpable mass, ascites, or paraneoplastic syndromes (eg, ectopic hormone 
secretion or acanthosis nigricans).

DIAGNOSTIC MODALITIES

    * Given the nonspecific presentation of patients with gallbladder 
carcinoma, the disease is difficult to diagnose preoperatively.
    * Accordingly, the disease is usually diagnosed either incidentally after 
cholecystectomy or at a very advanced stage.
    * If a gallbladder cancer is suspected preoperatively, usually as a result 
of an abnormally thickened gallbladder wall or the presence of a gallbladder 
mass on ultrasound, then further investigation with contrast-enhanced computed 
tomography scan or magnetic resonance imaging is warranted.
    * These imaging modalities are critical in the determination of 
resectability, providing information about the local extent of disease, 
including portal vascular invasion, as well as the presence of lymphadenopathy 
and liver metastases.
    * At The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, we perform 
percutaneous fine needle aspiration preoperatively to confirmthe diagnosis of 
gallbladder carcinoma in order to determine the extent of the planned surgical 
resection and any associated treatment, including portal vein embolization and 
neoadjuvant chemoradiation.

Ultrasound

    * Findings that are suggestive but not diagnostic of GBC include mural 
thickening or calcification, a mass protruding into the lumen, a fixed mass in 
the gallbladder, loss of the interface between the gallbladder and liver, or 
direct liver infiltration.

    * Small polypoid lesions within the gallbladder may represent adenomas, 
papillomas, cholesterolosis, or carcinomas.

          o Polyps over 1 cm in diameter are more likely to contain an invasive 
cancer than smaller ones.

Endoscopic ultrasound

Endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) is more accurate for imaging the gallbladder 
than is extracorporeal US. It is useful both in the differential diagnosis of 
gallbladder polyps, and in staging tumor extent.

CT and MRI

    * On CT, GBC can appear as a polypoid mass protruding into the lumen or 
completely filling it, a focal or diffuse thickening of the gallbladder wall, 
or a mass in the gallbladder fossa with the gallbladder itself being 
indiscernible; liver invasion, suspected nodal involvement, or distant 
metastases may be shown.

    * CT is less helpful in distinguishing benign from malignant polyps.
    * In contrast, dynamic MRI and MR cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) can help 
to differentiate benign from malignant gallbladder lesions in equivocal cases, 
and provide information as to disease extent.
    * MRI is particularly useful for visualizing invasion into the 
hepatoduodenal ligament, portal vein encasement, and lymph node involvement.

Cholangiography

These procedures may be helpful in planning the surgical procedure as they may 
indicate tumor growth in intrahepatic biliary ducts or in the common bile duct.

Laboratory studies

    * Laboratory studies are typically unremarkable unless the patient has 
developed obstructive jaundice an elevated alkaline phosphatase or serum 
bilirubin may be related to bile duct obstruction.
    * Unfortunately, there are no reliable tumor markers, including CEA and CA 
19-9 levels which are often elevated, but not diagnostically useful because 
they lack specificity and sensitivity.


HISTOLOGY

    * The majority are adenocarcinomas, although other histologic types are 
occasionally found, including small cell cancer, squamous cell carcinoma, 
lymphoma, and sarcoma.
    * Grossly, GBC can appear infiltrative, nodular, papillary, or a 
combination of these morphologies.
    * Papillary carcinomas, which can sometimes fill the entire gallbladder, 
have the most favorable prognosis.

    * Adenocarcinomas originate as mucosal lesions, invading the gallbladder 
wall as they grow.
    * The lack of a well-defined muscularis layer permits early vascular, 
lymphatic, and neural invasion.
    * Tumors frequently extend outside of the gallbladder, invading adjacent 
organs, particularly the liver, as they grow.

STAGING

Nevin staging system — Originally described in 1976, the Nevin staging system 
for GBC includes five stages that are defined as follows :

Stage I — Intramucosal only

Stage II — Involvement of mucosa and muscularis

Stage III — Involvement of all three layers

Stage IV — Involvement of all three layers and the cystic lymph node

Stage V — Involvement of liver by direct extension or metastases to any other 
organ.

TNM Staging

Primary tumor (T)

TX -Primary tumor cannot be assessed

T0 -No evidence of primary tumor

Tis -Carcinoma in situ

T1 -Tumor invades lamina propria or muscle layer

T1a -Tumor invades lamina propria

T1b -Tumor invades muscle layer

T2 -Tumor invades perimuscular connective tissue; no extension beyond serosa or 
into liver

T3 -Tumor perforates the serosa (visceral peritoneum) and/or directly invades 
the liver and/or one other adjacent organ or structure, such as the stomach, 
duodenum, colon, or pancreas, omentum or extrahepatic bile ducts

T4 -Tumor invades main portal vein or hepatic artery or invades multiple 
extrahepatic organs or structures

Regional lymph nodes (N)

NX -Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed

N0 -No regional lymph node metastasis

N1 -Regional lymph node metastasis

Distant metastasis (M)

MX -Distant metastasis cannot be assessed

M0 -No distant metastasis

M1 -Distant metastasis

Stage grouping

Stage 0 -Tis N0 M0

Stage IA -T1 N0 M0

Stage IB -T2 N0 M0

Stage IIA -T3 N0 M0

Stage IIB -T1 N1 M0, T2 N1 M0, T3 N1 M0

Stage III -T4 Any N M0

Stage IV -Any T Any N M1


Posted by jitendraagrawal2000 at 5:23 AM

Dr. Jitendra Agrawal, Kanpur, India.

Kirim email ke