Image copyright Getty Images Image caption More than 50 sponsors have withdrawn ads from Mr O'Reilly's show

Fox News is reportedly about to drop the country's top-rated cable news host, Bill O'Reilly, amid claims he sexually harassed female colleagues.

The Wall Street Journal - owned by Rupert Murdoch, who also owns Fox News - reports the network is "preparing to cut ties" with the presenter.

Pressure on Fox has mounted since recent reports that five women received $13m in payouts because of Mr O'Reilly.

More than 50 sponsors have withdrawn ads from his show, The O'Reilly Factor.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption A protester outside the Fox office in New York

US media report that the board of 21st Century Fox will hold a meeting about the matter on Thursday.

According to New York Magazine, executives were holding emergency meetings on Wednesday morning to discuss how to get rid of Mr O'Reilly.

The presenter, who has been with the network almost since its inception, has denied all of the allegations.

On Tuesday evening a lawyer for a former African-American clerical worker at Fox alleged her client had been harassed by Mr O'Reilly in 2008.

Lawyer Lisa Bloom said the Fox News host had referred to the unidentified woman as "hot chocolate".

"He would leer at her," said Ms Bloom. "He would always do this when no one else was around, and she was scared."

Analysis: Anthony Zurcher, BBC News, Washington

The sexual harassment charges against Bill O'Reilly aren't new. They've bubbled up before and have been quietly ushered from view, thanks to multimillion dollar legal settlements.

Now, however, they appear poised to bring the top-rated conservative talk show host down.

So what changed? Was it lurid details of his alleged behaviour? The protests? Commercial sponsors abandoning his show? The impact the scandal could have on 21st Century Fox's attempts to purchase European broadcaster Sky?

All probably contributed to O'Reilly's impending exit. The crack in the proverbial dam, however, came when Fox News head Roger Ailes was sacked for his own sexual harassment scandal.

If Mr Ailes, who built the conservative television empire, could be laid low by his tawdry behaviour, no one was untouchable - even Mr O'Reilly.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Mr Ailes was sacked over a harassment lawsuit filed by anchor Gretchen Carlson (L)

Welcome to Fox News in the Donald Trump era. Mr Ailes is out. Mr O'Reilly is nearly gone.

Presenter Megyn Kelly has bolted to NBC. The only giant left standing is Trump super-fan Sean Hannity.

A network that defined itself by blanket opposition to Barack Obama now appears adrift, challenged by more aggressive conservative media outlets and toxic to the left.

It's a tricky position to occupy - a victim of its own success… and hubris.

Mr O'Reilly's attorney, Marc Kasowitz, said the latest accusation was part of a "brutal campaign of character assassination that is unprecedented in post-McCarthyist America".

Mr Kasowitz said this was being driven by "far-left organizations bent on destroying O'Reilly for political and financial reasons".

Image copyright Reuters Image caption Wendy Walsh (R) says she lost work on the show after rebuffing Mr O'Reilly's advances in 2013

Protesters - including self-described survivors of sexual assault and harassment - turned up on Tuesday outside Fox News headquarters in New York.

They demanded the network fire the host, who recently signed a $20m-a-year contract.

Planes flew overhead with banners attached that read: "Fox: #dropOReilly, the sexual predator."

Conservative blogger Matt Drudge also weighed in on his rarely-used personal Twitter account, seeming to bid farewell to Mr O'Reilly.

"O'Reilly has had tremendous run," he posted. "Very few in the business get to decide when and how things end. Media is most brutal of all industries..."

The Fox News host is on holiday in Italy until 24 April, however, whether he returns to his nightly slot is in serious doubt.

On Wednesday, he was photographed shaking hands with Pope Francis after the pontiff's weekly address to the general audience at the Vatican.

Mr O'Reilly, who has previously used his show to lecture the pontiff on American immigration policies, was seated in a VIP viewing section during the address.

Media-watchers say the harassment allegations have become too much of a liability for 21st Century Fox.

A current concern for the Murdoch family is their pending $14bn (£11bn) deal to buy out satellite provider Sky, which is being scrutinised by British regulators.

Earlier this month authorities with the European Commission cleared 21 Century Fox to acquire the remaining 61% of Sky that it does not yet own.

Sources at the company tell US media that Rupert Murdoch was in favour of keeping Mr O'Reilly in his post.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption The 21st Century Fox board will be decided O'Reilly's fate

The O'Reilly Factor draws nearly four million viewers per night.

But James Murdoch, Rupert's son and chief executive officer of 21st Century Fox, reportedly argued that Mr O'Reilly should go.

The company reputation has taken a hit after sexual harassment allegations were also levelled at Roger Ailes, the former head of Fox News.

Mr Ailes resigned in 2016 after being sued by a former Fox News presenter, Gretchen Carlson.

He was also accused of "unwanted sexual advances" by popular host Megyn Kelly, who left Fox for NBC last year.