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Bile duct cancer is a cancer that starts in the bile duct. In
order to understand this cancer, it helps to know about the normal
structure and function of the bile duct.
About the bile duct
The bile duct is a thin tube, about 4 to 5 inches long, that
reaches from the liver to the small intestine. The major function of
the bile duct is to transport a fluid called bile from the liver and
gallbladder to the small intestine, where it helps digest the fats in
foods.
Different parts of the bile duct system have different names.
In the liver, it begins as many tiny tubes (ductules) where bile
collects from the liver cells. The ductules come together to form small
ducts, which then merge into larger ducts and eventually the left and
right hepatic ducts. These ducts exit from the liver and join to form
the common hepatic duct. About one third of the way along the length of
the bile duct, the gallbladder (a small organ that stores bile)
attaches by a small duct called the cystic duct. The combined duct is
called the common bile duct. The common bile duct passes through part
of the pancreas before it empties into the first part of the small
intestine (the duodenum), next to where the pancreatic duct also enters
the small intestine.
Types of bile duct cancers
Cancers can develop in any part of the bile duct and, based on
their location, are divided into 3 groups. Cancers in these different
areas may cause different symptoms.
Intrahepatic
bile duct cancers: These cancers develop in the smaller
bile duct branches inside the liver. They can sometimes be confused
with cancers that start in the liver cells, which are called
hepatocellular carcinomas, and are often treated the same way. Only
about 1 out of 10 bile duct cancers are intrahepatic.
Hilar (also
called perihilar) bile duct cancers: These cancers develop
where the hepatic ducts have joined and are just leaving the liver.
They are also called Klatskin tumors. These are the most common type of
bile duct cancer.
Distal bile duct
cancers: These bile duct cancers are found further down
the bile duct, closer to the small intestine.
More than 95% of bile duct cancers are of the adenocarcinoma
type. Adenocarcinomas are cancers of glandular cells that can develop
in several organs of the body. Bile duct adenocarcinomas develop from
the mucus glands that line the inside of the duct. Cholangiocarcinoma
is another name for a bile duct adenocarcinoma.
Not all bile duct tumors are cancerous. Bile duct hamartomas
and bile duct adenomas are benign (non-cancerous) tumors and,
therefore, are not discussed further in this document.
Other cancers in the liver
Hepatocellular carcinomas, which develop from liver cells, are
more common than cholangiocarcinomas of bile duct cells. Hepatocellular
carcinoma is discussed in more detail in our document, Liver Cancer.
Adenocarcinomas that form in other organs, such as the
pancreas, colon, rectum, stomach, lung, breast, or prostate, may spread
to the liver. These are called secondary liver cancers or liver
metastases. Their prognosis and treatment are not the same as
hepatocellular carcinoma or cholangiocarcinoma, but instead depend on
where the cancer started.
Last Revised: 04/17/2006
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