Do drugs with biliary toxicity cause cholangiocarcinoma?
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Many commonly used therapeutic drugs cause biliary toxicity, but it is unclear if they are directly responsible for the increasing incidence of cholangiocarcinoma (CCA). We tested experimentally and analyzed through a cohort approach whether drugs, such as the commonly used antibiotic Augmentin, which is a poster-child of biliary toxicity, are causally linked to CCA development. Using sophisticated analytical tools in cholangiocytes, including single extracellular vesicle (EV) analysis, we found no evidence that Augmentin increases the cholangiocyte malignancy marker YAP1 or phospho-YAP1. Furthermore, we analyzed the CCA incidence in our healthcare system and determined it to be 0.0932% (Augmentin group) and 0.0799% (amoxicillin control group). Although the Augmentin group showed a numerically higher CCA incidence, the association did not reach statistical significance (RR = 1.1669, 95% CI 0.6200–2.1961; Fisher’s exact test, P = 0.7493). Similarly, we found no evidence for cholangiocarcinoma development with other commonly used drugs, including chlorpromazine, floxuridine, 5-fluorouracil, flucloxacillin and terbinafine. We conclude that there is no direct causal relationship between clinical Augmentin doses and CCA development.