82 research outputs found

    Increase in chromogranin A- and serotonin-positive cells in pouch mucosa of patients with ulcerative colitis undergoing proctocolectomy

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    Background: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is associated with neuroendocrine cell hyperplasia. Aims: We investigated neuroendocrine cells in J-pouches of patients with ulcerative colitis undergoing restorative proctocolectomy and ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Methods: Sections from pouch biopsies of 17 patients and ileal biopsies of 17 active IBD patients and 16 controls were processed by immunohistochemistry for chromogranin A (CgA) and serotonin. Mucosal tryptophan hydroxylase (TpH)-1 and serotonin-selective reuptake transporter (SERT) transcripts were measured by quantitative RT-PCR. TpH-1 and SERT transcripts were detected in pouch biopsies cultured with infliximab or its isotype control, while interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-8 were measured in biopsy supernatants. Results: A significant increase in CgA-positive cells and serotonin-positive cells was observed in both pouch and IBD ileum compared to control ileum. Significantly raised transcripts of TpH-1, but not SERT, were found in IBD ileum in comparison to control ileum, with no significant difference between pouch and IBD ileum. Infliximab had no influence on ex vivo pouch expression of TpH-1 and SERT, nor on the production of IL-6 and IL-8. Conclusion: We here demonstrated neuroendocrine cell hyperplasia in pouch mucosa. Further studies are needed to clarify the pathophysiological implication of this finding

    Prognostic relevance and putative histogenetic role of cytokeratin 7 and MUC5AC expression in Crohn\u2019s disease-associated small bowel carcinoma

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    Most Crohn\u2019s disease-associated small bowel carcinomas (CrD-SBCs) are diagnosed in advanced stage and have poor prognosis. To improve diagnosis and therapy, a better knowledge of tumour precancerous lesions, histotypes and prognostic factors is needed. We investigated histologically and immunohistochemically 52 CrD-SBCs and 51 small bowel carcinomas unrelated to inflammatory disease, together with their tumour-associated mucosa, looking for Crohn-selective changes. Histologic patterns and phenotypic markers potentially predictive of CrD-SBC histogenesis and prognosis were analysed. Cytokeratin 7 or MUC5AC-positive metaplastic changes were found in about half of investigated CrD-SBCs, significantly more frequently than in CrD-unrelated SBCs. They correlated with metaplastic changes of their associated mucosa, while being absent in normal ileal mucosa. Histologic patterns suggestive for progression of some cytokeratin 7 and/or MUC5AC-positive metaplastic lesions into cancer of the same phenotype were also observed. Patient survival analyses showed that tumour cytokeratin 7 or MUC5AC expression and non-cohesive histotype were adverse prognostic factors at univariable analysis, while cytokeratin 7 and non-cohesive histotype were also found to predict worse survival in stage- and age-inclusive multivariable analyses. Besides conventional dysplasia, hyperplasia-like non-conventional lesions were observed in CrD-SBC-associated mucosa, with patterns suggestive for a histogenetic link with adjacent cancer. In conclusion the cytokeratin 7 and/or MUC5AC-positive metaplastic foci and the non-conventional growths may have a role in cancer histogenesis, while tumour cytokeratin 7 and non-cohesive histotype may also predict poor patient survival. Present findings are worth being considered in future prospective histogenetic and clinical studies

    Small bowel carcinomas in celiac or Crohn's disease: Distinctive histophenotypic, molecular and histogenetic patterns

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    Non-familial small bowel carcinomas are relatively rare and have a poor prognosis. Two small bowel carcinoma subsets may arise in distinct immune-inflammatory diseases (celiac disease and Crohn's disease) and have been recently suggested to differ in prognosis, celiac disease-associated carcinoma cases showing a better outcome, possibly due to their higher DNA microsatellite instability and tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes. In this study, we investigated the histological structure (glandular vs diffuse/poorly cohesive, mixed or solid), cell phenotype (intestinal vs gastric/pancreatobiliary duct type) and Wnt signaling activation (β-catenin and/or SOX-9 nuclear expression) in a series of 26 celiac disease-associated small bowel carcinoma, 25 Crohn's disease-associated small bowel carcinoma and 25 sporadic small bowel carcinoma cases, searching for new prognostic parameters. In addition, non-tumor mucosa of celiac and Crohn's disease patients was investigated for epithelial precursor changes (hyperplastic, metaplastic or dysplastic) to help clarify carcinoma histogenesis. When compared with non-glandular structure and non-intestinal phenotype, both glandular structure and intestinal phenotype were associated with a more favorable outcome at univariable or stage- and microsatellite instability/tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte-inclusive multivariable analysis. The prognostic power of histological structure was independent of the clinical groups while the non-intestinal phenotype, associated with poor outcome, was dominant among Crohn's disease-associated carcinoma. Both nuclear β-catenin and SOX-9 were preferably expressed among celiac disease-associated carcinomas; however, they were devoid, per se, of prognostic value. We obtained findings supporting an origin of celiac disease-associated carcinoma in SOX-9-positive immature hyperplastic crypts, partly through flat β-catenin-positive dysplasia, and of Crohn's disease-associated carcinoma in a metaplastic (gastric and/or pancreatobiliary-type) mucosa, often through dysplastic polypoid growths of metaplastic phenotype. In conclusion, despite their common origin in a chronically inflamed mucosa, celiac disease-associated and Crohn's disease-associated small bowel carcinomas differ substantially in histological structure, phenotype, microsatellite instability/tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte status, Wnt pathway activation, mucosal precursor lesions and prognosis

    New insights into the role of age and carcinoembryonic antigen in the prognosis of colorectal cancer

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    The aim of this study was to verify through relative survival (an estimate of cancer-specific survival) the true prognostic factors of colorectal cancer. The study involved 506 patients who underwent locally radical resection. All the clinical, histological and laboratory parameters were prognostically analysed for both overall and relative survival. This latter was calculated from the expected survival of the general population with identical age, sex and calendar years of observation. Univariate and multivariate analyses were applied to the proportional hazards model. Liver metastases, age, lymph node involvement and depth of bowel wall involvement were independent prognosticators of both overall and relative survival, whereas carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) was predictive only of relative survival. Increasing age was unfavourably related to overall survival, but mildly protective with regard to relative survival. Three out of the five prognostic factors identified are the cornerstones of the current staging systems, and were confirmed as adequate by the analysis of relative survival. The results regarding age explain the conflicting findings so far obtained from studies considering overall survival only and advise against the adoption of absolute age limits in therapeutic protocols. Moreover, the prechemotherapy CEA level showed a high clinical value

    Nasal paraganglioma. A case report

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    Nonchromaffin paragangliomas or chemodectomas arise in paraganglia distributed in various parts of the body. The jugular bulb, the vagal body and the bifurcation of the carotid artery are the most common sites of origin of paraganglioma in the head and neck region. Paragangliomas in the nose and paranasal sinuses are extremely rare and very few cases of definite paraganglioma arising primarily in the nose or paranasal sinuses have been reported. The paraganglioma is a slow-growing tumour that produces nasal obstruction, profuse epistaxis and facial swelling. Complete excision of the glomus tumour is normally curative. We report a case of nasal paraganglioma and discuss the diagnosis and therapy

    Small bowel enterocyte apoptosis and proliferation are increased in the elderly

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    Background. It is known that in the elderly the small bowel does not reveal structural and functional deteriorations in normal conditions, whereas the absorptive function is impaired in stress conditions. Objective: The balance between enterocyte apoptosis and proliferation being responsible for the maintenance of tissue size, mucosal morphology and function in the gastrointestinal tract, the aim of our study was to evaluate the rates of enterocyte apoptosis and proliferation in the duodenal mucosa of aged human beings in comparison to adults. Methods: For this purpose, the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated digoxigenin-deoxyuridine triphosphate nick end labelling (TUNEL) technique and immunohistochemistry for MIB-1 detection were applied on histological sections of endoscopic duodenal biopsy specimens obtained from 12 healthy elderly subjects (mean age 77.6 years; M/F 7/5) and 12 healthy adult subjects (mean age 37.7 years; M/F 8/4). Counts were performed, at a constant magnification (x200), by computer-aided analysis and the results expressed as median percentages of positive enterocytes. Results: The results showed a significant increase in enterocyte apoptosis in the elderly (15.3 vs. 2.1% in the adults, p < 0.001) which was positively correlated (r(s) = 0.65, p < 0.05) with a significant increase in enterocyte proliferation (37.7 vs. 15.8% in the adults, p < 0.0001). Conclusions: These data suggest that the maintenance of mucosal architecture throughout the process of aging is due to either a hyperproliferative state or an exaggerated apoptosis with a consequent cellular immaturity, which may impair the absorptive function observed in stress conditions. Copyright (C) 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel

    Eosinophilic pleural effusion due to mesalamine. Report of a rare occurrence.

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    Mesalamine-induced lung toxicity has often been described. We report on a case of a patient who underwent mesalamine treatment, though in the absence of established criteria required for diagnosing Crohn's disease (CD) or ulcerative colitis (UC). He developed an adverse respiratory reaction to the drug, thus definitely proving its lung damaging capacity. The clinical presentation included eosinophilic pleural effusion, a feature never previously described in association with mesalamine intake
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