AI Article Synopsis

  • Most cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) patients have advanced and often inoperable stages at diagnosis, leading to high relapse rates after surgery; however, research efforts and clinical trials are increasing to better understand and treat this cancer.
  • Recent randomized clinical trials involving adjuvant chemotherapy post-surgery have been conducted, with the BILCAP study indicating some survival benefits that have already influenced clinical practice, particularly with capecitabine use.
  • While cisplatin and gemcitabine are currently the first-line treatments for advanced CCA, ongoing research is exploring genomic subtypes and targeted therapies, such as IDH-1 and FGFR-2, alongside immune environment investigations, although many are still in early stages and not yet ready for

Article Abstract

Most of the patients with cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) present with advanced (inoperable or metastatic) disease, and relapse rates are high in those undergoing potentially curative resection. Previous treatment nihilism of patients with advanced disease has been replaced by active clinical research with the advent of randomized clinical trials (RCTs) and a much greater effort at understanding molecular mechanisms underpinning CCA. Three RCTs have recently been reported evaluating adjuvant chemotherapy following curative resection; only one of these has the potential to change practice. The BILCAP study failed to meet its primary endpoint by intention-to-treat analysis; however, a survival benefit was seen in a preplanned sensitivity analysis (predominantly adjusting for lymph nodes status). This, along with the numerical difference in median overall survival has led to the uptake of adjuvant capecitabine by many clinicians. In patients with advanced disease, the only level 1 data available supports the use of cisplatin and gemcitabine for the first-line treatment of patients with advanced disease; there is no established second-line chemotherapy. Previous forays into targeted therapy have proven unfruitful (namely targeting the epithelial growth factor receptor and vascular endothelial growth factor pathways). An increasing number of genomic subtypes are being defined; for some of these on-target therapeutic options are under active investigation. The most developed are studies targeting IDH-1 (isocitrate dehydrogenase) mutations and FGFR-2 (fibroblast growth factor receptor) fusions, with promising early results. Several other pathways are under evaluation, along with early studies targeting the immune environment; these are too premature to change practice to date. These emerging treatments are discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/liv.14100DOI Listing

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