Extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (eCCA) is a highly aggressive malignancy arising from the biliary epithelium, with surgical resection representing the only potentially curative treatment. The predominant periductal infiltrating growth pattern, characterized by subepithelial tumor spread and desmoplastic stromal reaction, severely limits the diagnostic sensitivity of conventional endoscopic sampling techniques, which primarily assess the luminal mucosal surface. This review provides a histomorphology-oriented diagnostic framework for indeterminate extrahepatic biliary strictures, integrating advanced endoscopic technologies with emerging optical diagnostic approaches. ERCP combined with cholangioscopy demonstrates superior sensitivity for perihilar strictures, while EUS-guided tissue acquisition shows higher diagnostic yield in distal cholangiocarcinoma, also providing locoregional staging. Advanced EUS technologies—including elastography, contrast harmonic EUS, and Detective Flow Imaging—further improve characterization of indeterminate strictures by evaluating tissue stiffness, microvascular architecture, and periductal infiltration. Ex vivo fluorescence confocal laser microscopy (FCM) enables real-time microscopic evaluation of biopsy specimens, reducing diagnostic turnaround time and minimizing inadequate sampling. A location-adapted diagnostic algorithm integrating cross-sectional imaging, ERCP, cholangioscopy, and EUS is proposed. An integrated, biology-informed endoscopic approach tailored to tumor location and ductal wall involvement may significantly improve early eCCA detection and guide patient selection for curative treatment.
Integrating Advanced Endoscopic Techniques and Confocal Microscopy for Early Detection of Extrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma / Lattanzi, Barbara; Covotta, Francesco; Crescenzi, Anna; Lamazza, Antonietta; Maria Di Matteo, Francesco; Alvaro, Domenico; Cardinale, Vincenzo. - In: CANCERS. - ISSN 2072-6694. - 18:9(2026), pp. 1-15. [10.3390/cancers18091334]
Integrating Advanced Endoscopic Techniques and Confocal Microscopy for Early Detection of Extrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma
Barbara Lattanzi
;Francesco Covotta;Anna Crescenzi;Antonietta Lamazza;Domenico Alvaro;Vincenzo Cardinale
2026
Abstract
Extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (eCCA) is a highly aggressive malignancy arising from the biliary epithelium, with surgical resection representing the only potentially curative treatment. The predominant periductal infiltrating growth pattern, characterized by subepithelial tumor spread and desmoplastic stromal reaction, severely limits the diagnostic sensitivity of conventional endoscopic sampling techniques, which primarily assess the luminal mucosal surface. This review provides a histomorphology-oriented diagnostic framework for indeterminate extrahepatic biliary strictures, integrating advanced endoscopic technologies with emerging optical diagnostic approaches. ERCP combined with cholangioscopy demonstrates superior sensitivity for perihilar strictures, while EUS-guided tissue acquisition shows higher diagnostic yield in distal cholangiocarcinoma, also providing locoregional staging. Advanced EUS technologies—including elastography, contrast harmonic EUS, and Detective Flow Imaging—further improve characterization of indeterminate strictures by evaluating tissue stiffness, microvascular architecture, and periductal infiltration. Ex vivo fluorescence confocal laser microscopy (FCM) enables real-time microscopic evaluation of biopsy specimens, reducing diagnostic turnaround time and minimizing inadequate sampling. A location-adapted diagnostic algorithm integrating cross-sectional imaging, ERCP, cholangioscopy, and EUS is proposed. An integrated, biology-informed endoscopic approach tailored to tumor location and ductal wall involvement may significantly improve early eCCA detection and guide patient selection for curative treatment.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Lattanzi_Integrating_2026.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipologia:
Versione editoriale (versione pubblicata con il layout dell'editore)
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
7.01 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
7.01 MB | Adobe PDF |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


