Background/aims: Combined hepatocellular and cholangiocarcinoma is a rare tumor of the liver, and its histogenesis remains unclear. The authors addressed this issue in the current article.
Methods: A specimen aseptically obtained from the surgically resected combined hepatocellular and cholangiocarcinoma was processed for primary culture. The morphologic features of the established cell line cultured on a plastic dish and in type I collagen gel matrix, and transplanted in nude mice were examined.
Results: The authors established a new human combined hepatocellular and cholangiocarcinoma cell line, designated KMCH-2, from a 40-year-old Japanese man. KMCH-2 cells on a plastic dish proliferated in a monolayered sheet with a population doubling time of 32 to 44 h. KMCH-2 expressed functional characteristics of hepatocellular carcinoma, such as albumin synthesis at protein and mRNA levels, but were poorly differentiated in morphology, showing an overlap of features with cholangiocarcinoma. KMCH-2 cells cultured within type I collagen gel matrix proliferated, forming compact to vaguely trabecular and pseudoglandular arrangements, and differentiated to show morphological characteristics of hepatocellular carcinoma unlike the cells on a plastic dish. Mucin production was not detected in KMCH-2 cells in vitro. Subcutaneous tumors which developed in nude mice injected with KMCH-2 cells represented features of adenocarcinoma with mucin production.
Conclusions: The present results revealed the presence of an albumin-producing human hepatic neoplastic cell, such as KMCH-2, that can differentiate to show not only the features of hepatocellular carcinoma but also those of cholangiocarcinoma under certain growth conditions.