Review
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2022.
World J Gastrointest Oncol. Mar 15, 2022; 14(3): 607-627
Published online Mar 15, 2022. doi: 10.4251/wjgo.v14.i3.607
Table 1 Definite and probable risk factors for cholangiocarcinoma
Definite risk factors
Primary sclerosing cholangitis
Liver fluke infection (Opisthorchis viverrine, Clonorchis sinensis)
Hepatolithiasis
Biliary malformation (choledochal cysts, Caroli’s disease, congenital hepatic fibrosis)
Thorotrast
Probable risk factors
Alcohol
Hepatitis B
Hepatitis C
Cirrhosis
Toxins (dioxin, polyvinyl chloride)
Biliary–enteric drainage procedures
Inflammatory bowel disease
Asbestos
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
Metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, obesity
Smoking
Chronic pancreatitis
Table 2 Histological classification of cholangiocarcinoma
Based on histological differentiation
Well (> 95% of tumour composed of glands)
Moderately (50%-95% of tumour composed of glands)
Poor (5%-49% of tumour composed of glands)
Undifferentiated type (< 5% of tumor composed of glands)
Based on glandular features
Conventional type (bile duct type)
Small bile duct type (intrahepatic)
Large bile duct type
Cholangiocellular (intrahepatic)
Uncommon variants
Ductal plate malformation type (intrahepatic)
Lymphoepithelioma type
Clear cell type
Squamous/adenosquamous type
Mucinous carcinoma
Sarcomatoid
Signet ring carcinoma
Neuroendocrine
HCC-like
Table 3 Clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular characteristics

Large duct type
Small duct type
LocationProximal to hepatic hilumPeripheral
Risk factorsPSC, Liver fluke infection, HepatolithiasisChronic liver disease, viral hepatitis
Gross featuresPeriductal infiltrating, Mixed patternMass forming
Precursor lesionBilIN, IPNB, ITPNUnknown
PathologyLarge, widely spaced glands, Columnar with mucin production, desmoplastic stromaSmall tubules, fused or anastomosing glands, cuboidal to low columnar, central scarring, minimal to no mucin
Perinerual invasionCommonRare
Lymphovascular invasion/lymph node metastasesCommonRare
Tumour borderInfiltrativeExpansile or pushing, rarelyinfiltrative
Immunohistochemical featuresS100P and TFF1CD56, N-cadherin, CRP
Molecular alterationsKRAS and GNAS mutationsCOX2 upregulations IDH1/IDH2 and BRAF mutations, FGFR2 fusion