Abstract

The aim of the present study was to elucidate the clinicopathological significance of interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-33 expression in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas (iCCAs) and perihilar cholangiocarcinomas (pCCAs). IL-6 and IL-33 mRNA expression levels were examined in iCCAs (n = 55) and pCCAs (n = 32) by the use of quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction and a highly sensitive in-situ hybridisation protocol (RNAscope), and expression levels were correlated with clinicopathological features. According to a recently proposed classification scheme, iCCAs were separated into small-duct (n = 33) and large-duct (n = 22) types. IL-6 and IL-33 expression levels were higher in large-duct iCCAs and pCCAs than in small-duct iCCAs, and there was a positive correlation between the expression levels of these cytokines. Double in-situ hybridisation/immunostaining showed that IL-6 mRNA was expressed in actin-positive (myo)fibroblasts, whereas IL-33 mRNA was mainly produced by CD31-positive endothelial cells. With the average expression level as a cut-off point, cases were classified as IL-6high and IL-6low or IL-33high and IL-33low . In the combined cohort of large-duct iCCAs and pCCAs, IL-6high and IL-6low cholangiocarcinomas shared many features, whereas IL-33high cases had less aggressive characteristics than IL-33low cases, as shown by lower tumour marker concentrations, smaller tumour sizes, less common vascular invasion, lower pT stages, and higher lymphocyte/monocyte ratios in blood. KRAS mutations were slightly less common in IL-33high cases than in IL-33low cases (9% versus 29%; P = 0.061). The strong expression of IL-33 in tissue appeared to be an independent favourable prognostic factor. IL-33high cholangiocarcinomas may represent a unique, less aggressive carcinogenetic process of the large bile ducts.

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