Background. Chronic inflammatory conditions of the biliary tree strongly predispose patients to biliary carcinoma. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of interleukin-6 (IL-6) expression during biliary carcinogenesis in bilioenterostomized hamsters. Materials and Methods. Syrian hamsters were subjected to either a choledochoduodenostomy (CD, n = 11) or a simple laparotomy (SL, n = 10) and then received N-nitrosobis(2-oxopropyl)amine (BOP) treatment. The animals were sacrificed 20 wk after surgery and the development of biliary carcinoma, the presence and degree of cholangitis, and IL-6 expression on the biliary epithelia were examined histologically. Results. In the CD group, eight hamsters (73%) demonstrated persistent cholangitis and six (55%) of them developed intrahepatic biliary carcinoma, while no hamster without cholangitis showed any biliary carcinoma. In the SL group, cholangitis was recognized in four hamsters (40%) and no development of biliary carcinoma was identified. A significantly high incidence of tumor development (P = 0.024) and a close correlation between the presence of cholangitis and the occurrence of biliary carcinoma (P = 0.013) were thus evident in the CD group. Moreover, the degree of cholangitis was significantly higher in the CD hamsters (P = 0.041) and an IL-6 overexpression was identified in five hamsters that had undergone a CD, with a scattered expression on the intra- and extrahepatic biliary epithelia. Despite the fact that the induced biliary carcinomas showed a multicentric occurrence in the liver, these tumors originated from within the restricted area where IL-6 was expressed. Conclusions. A deregulated IL-6 overexpression on the biliary epithelia may therefore be involved in inflammation-associated biliary carcinogenesis in hamsters that have undergone a bilioenterostomy. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.