Abstract

In order to investigate the very high incidence of gallbladder cancer in Bolivia, a series of patients with gallbladder cancer and/or cholelithiasis from a hospital in La Paz was compared to a series of patients with cholelithiasis from Philadelphia. Each group demonstrated a similar female predilection. Bolivian patients with gallbladder cancer were older than patients with cholelithiasis who, in turn, were older than the general population (p less than 0.001). Racial differences demonstrated previously were confirmed. Bolivian gallstones were uniformly cholesterol in type, in contrast to the US series, in which 27% of patients had black pigment stones. Bile specimens obtained from Bolivian patients with cholelithiasis had a lower concentration of bile salts, phospholipids, and cholesterol than bile specimens from US cholelithiasis patients (p less than 0.01, less than 0.001, and less than 0.001, respectively). These biochemical differences may help to explain the differing incidence of cholelithiasis and gallbladder cancer in the US and Bolivia.

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