Overview

Approximately 9,500 new patients are diagnosed with cancer of the biliary tract (the gallbladder and bile ducts) each year in the United States. This is the second most common type of cancer to involve the region of the liver, following cancer of the hepatocytes (hepatocellular carcinoma). Each year in the USA, 3600 patients will die of biliary tract cancer, accounting for approximately 1% of all deaths from cancer. Biliary tract cancers are notoriously challenging to diagnose and treat.

The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions is a leader in the treatment and investigative study of biliary tract cancer. We have created this website to give patients and physicians access to the latest clinical and research developments related to this disease, as well as to the multidisciplinary team assembled here to fight biliary tract cancer.

Symptoms

Blockage

Blockage

Patients with bile duct cancer most often become symptomatic when the cancer obstructs (blocks) the drainage of bile. Because bile cannot be excreted into the bowel, the bilirubin pigments accumulate in the blood, causing jaundice in 90% of patients. The jaundice is usually associated with itching of the skin (also called "pruritus"). The body compensates partially and excretes some of this bilirubin via the urine, so patients may have dark (cola colored) urine. Because bile cannot reach the intestine, the patient's stools become white (clay colored).

Right upper quadrant

Right Upper Quadrant

Other symptoms result from inflammation secondary to tumor obstruction. Patients with gallbladder cancer may have pain in the right upper portion of the abdomen. This pain is a result of inflammation of the gallbladder (cholecystitis) due to blockage of the cystic duct. In fact, approximately 1% of patients who undergo cholecystectomy for suspected cholecystitis prove to have unsuspected gallbladder carcinoma. Distal bile duct tumors near the ampulla of Vater, the point at which the bile drains into the bowel, obstruct the pancreatic duct and lead to inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis).