B Kaj‐Carbaidwala et al. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2025; 80:450–454. Determining the time to cholangiocarcinoma in pediatric‐onset PSC‐IBD
Background: “Cholangiocarcinoma is a devastating disease, with up to 80% mortality and limited treatment options…A large retrospective cohort study reported that cholangiocarcinoma occurred in 1000 per 100,000 (1%) of children with PSC, with all occurring in children over 15 years of age and at a median of 6 years after the PSC diagnosis…Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is associated with a 400× increased risk of cholangiocarcinoma.”
Methods: Review of n = 175 studies resulted in a cohort of n = 21 patients with pediatric‐onset PSC‐IBD‐cholangiocarcinoma
Key findings:
- The earliest diagnosis of cholangiocarcinoma was made at 14 years of age.
- 14% of of patients with pediatric‐onset PSC/IBD developed cholangiocarcinoma within the first 6 months of the second diagnosis
- 23% of patients with pediatric‐onset PSC/IBD developed cholangiocarcinoma within the first year of the second diagnosis
- 38% of patients with pediatric‐onset PSC/IBD developed cholangiocarcinoma within the first 2 years.
- 50% of patients with pediatric‐onset PSC/IBD developed cholangiocarcinoma within the first 7 years
- 50% of patients were between 14 and 25 years old when diagnosed with cholangiocarcinoma
Based on these data, the authors recommend screening for cholangiocarcinoma in this population of pediatric patients with IBD-PSC. Screening would include ultrasound or magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography along with serum cancer antigen 19‐9 screening every 6–12 months. At the same time, the authors acknowledge limitations including a highly-selected patient population (selection bias) and relatively small number of patients. The absolute increase in risk for cholangiocarcinoma is not known. This study did not provide an estimate of the number of patients with IBD-PSC who develop cholangiocarcinoma; it only provides data on those with cholangiocarcinoma (thus no denominator to establish risk).
My take: Children, particularly adolescents, with IBD-PSC are at increased risk for both cholangiocarcinoma and colorectal cancer. The optimal surveillance strategy is still unclear. However, particularly in adolescents, I would favor yearly ultrasound and CA 19-9 for cholangiocarcinoma along with a low threshold for frequent colonoscopy (see ESPGHAN guidelines below).
Related blog posts:
- ESPGHAN Guidelines for PSC in Children (2024)
- Vancomycin for Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Patients with Primary Sclerosing Cholantgitis
- Does a Liver Transplantation Improve the Course of Inflammatory Bowel Disease?
- PSC in IBD
- Recurrent PSC in Children After Liver Transplantation
- How Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis Alters Outcomes in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
In the news: AP 5/4/25: Cuts have eliminated more than a dozen US government health-tracking programs “U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s motto is “ Make America Healthy Again,” but government cuts could make it harder to know if that’s happening…..Among those terminated at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were experts tracking abortions, pregnancies, job-related injuries, lead poisonings, sexual violence and youth smoking, the AP found.”

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