This study is a multicenter, ambidirectional cohort study aiming to consecutively recruit asymptomatic biliary dilation patients incidentally discovered by imaging from 25 medical centers across China. The investigators will collect comprehensive clinicopathological data from the cohort to evaluate the epidemiological characteristics of asymptomatic patients, the distribution of Todani classifications, common imaging-detected comorbidities, and natural history; and, based on high-quality evidence, assess whether surgical intervention can improve the prognosis of asymptomatic patients, thereby providing a basis for developing targeted surveillance and intervention strategies.
Biliary dilation (BD) is a common and complex benign biliary disorder, for which surgical resection remains the only definitive treatment. However, while there are numerous studies on symptomatic BD, there is a lack of systematic, reliable data that describing the population structure, complication rates, comparing natural history and postoperative outcomes of patients whom incidentally detected by imaging and have no biliary symptoms. This multicenter, ambidirectional cohort study aims to consecutively recruit asymptomatic BD patients from 25 tertiary medical centers across China and to systematically collect their clinicopathological data-including demographic characteristics, baseline clinical features, laboratory and imaging results, biliary specific biomarkers, and longitudinal follow up records-in order to establish an asymptomatic subcohort within the larger China BD cohort. Based on this subcohort, the research objectives are structured as follows: 1. Database Establishment and Maintenance: Construct and continuously update a multicenter clinical database for asymptomatic BD patients in China, ensuring data completeness and accessibility. 2. Epidemiological Characterization of Asymptomatic BD: Describe the epidemiological features of asymptomatic BD patients, including demographic profiles (age, sex), distribution of Todani classifications, incidence of various complications, and risk of malignant transformation. 3. Comparison of Surgical Treatment Versus Conservative Observation: Compare key clinical outcomes between asymptomatic BD patients who undergo surgical intervention and those managed by medical observation, thereby providing evidence-based guidance for clinical decision making in this population.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,008
Beijing Tsinghua Chang Gung Hospital
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
Complications rate
The occurrences of long-term postoperative complications include recurrent cholangitis, pancreatitis, bile duct stones, liver failure, and other such conditions.
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 5 years
Malignant transformation rate
The occurrence of malignant transformation associated with bile duct dilatation.
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 5 year
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