Combined Hepatocellular-Cholangiocarcinoma: Biology, Diagnosis, and Management

Liver Cancer. 2023 Apr 24;13(1):6-28. doi: 10.1159/000530700. eCollection 2024 Feb.

Abstract

Background: Combined hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma (cHCC-iCCA) is a rare type of primary liver cancer displaying characteristics of both hepatocytic and cholangiocytic differentiation.

Summary: Because of its aggressive nature, patients with cHCC-iCCA exhibit a poorer prognosis than those with HCC. Surgical resection and liver transplantation may be considered curative treatment approaches; however, only a minority of patients are eligible at the time of diagnosis, and postoperative recurrence rates are high. For cases that are not eligible for surgery, locoregional and systemic therapy are often administered based on treatment protocols applied for HCC or iCCA. Owing to the rarity of this cancer, there are still no established standard treatment protocols; therefore, the choice of therapy is often personalized and guided by the suspected predominant component. Further, the genomic and molecular heterogeneity of cHCC-iCCA can severely compromise the efficacy of the available therapies.

Key messages: In the present review, we summarize the latest advances in cHCC-iCCA and attempt to clarify its terminology and molecular biology. We provide an overview of the etiology of cHCC-iCCA and present new insights into the molecular pathology of this disease that could contribute to further studies aiming to improve the patient outcomes through new systemic therapies.

Keywords: Carcinogenesis; Combined hepatocellular-cholangiocarcinoma; Diagnosis; Liver cancer; Systemic tumor therapy; Tumor biology.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

Liangtao Ye is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 82000577 and 82073148), China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (No. 2020M680135), Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Digestive Cancer Research (No. 2021B1212040006), and Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Committee (JCYJ20200109142605909). The funding agencies were not involved in the study design and the data collection, analysis, and interpretation. The other authors received no funding relevant to the study.