Abstract

Cholangiocarcinoma, the second most common liver malignancy, after hepatocarcinoma is highly aggressive and usually diagnosed in advanced cases. In the era of personalized medicine, targeted therapy protocols are limited for cholangiocarcinoma and the only potential curative treatment, surgical resection, is seldom applicable.This retrospective study included all cases with pathology-confirmed intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma admitted in a tertiary healthcare facility during a 10-year timeframe. Clinical information, laboratory values, imaging studies, and survival data were retrieved, and PD-L1 immunostaining was performed on representative pathology slides, for each case. From the total of 136 included cases (49 surgical resections and 87 liver biopsies), 38.97% showed PD-L1 positivity on tumoral cells, 34.8% on tumor infiltrating immune cells, 10.11% on epithelial cells within the peritumoral area and 15.95% on immune cells from the peritumoral area. Overall survival was significantly higher in the first two scenarios. However, after adjusting for age, tumor number, tumor size, and tumor differentiation in a multivariate analysis, only PD-L1 positivity on tumor infiltrating immune cells remained a favorable prognostic for survival. High immune cell counts also correlated with increased overall survival.Our study demonstrated that PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint pathway in the microenvironment of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma bears prognostic significance. PD-L1 expression on immune cells, in both resection and biopsy specimens, might be a strong independent predictor for a favorable outcome.

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