13 research outputs found
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Light scattering spectroscopy identifies the malignant potential of pancreatic cysts during endoscopy
Pancreatic cancers are usually detected at an advanced stage and have poor prognosis. About one fifth of these arise from pancreatic cystic lesions. Yet not all lesions are precancerous, and imaging tools lack adequate accuracy for distinguishing precancerous from benign cysts. Therefore, decisions on surgical resection usually rely on endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA). Unfortunately, cyst fluid often contains few cells, and fluid chemical analysis lacks accuracy, resulting in dire consequences, including unnecessary pancreatic surgery for benign cysts and the development of cancer. Here, we report an optical spectroscopic technique, based on a spatial gating fibre-optic probe, that predicts the malignant potential of pancreatic cystic lesions during routine diagnostic EUS-FNA procedures. In a double-blind prospective study in 25 patients, with 14 cysts measured in vivo and 13 postoperatively, the technique achieved an overall accuracy of 95%, with a 95%confidence interval of 78–99%, in cysts with definitive diagnosis
High fat diet enhances stemness and tumorigenicity of intestinal progenitors
Little is known about how pro-obesity diets regulate tissue stem and progenitor cell function. Here we find that high fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity augments the numbers and function of Lgr5+ intestinal stem-cells (ISCs) of the mammalian intestine. Mechanistically, HFD induces a robust peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor delta (PPAR-d) signature in intestinal stem and (non-ISC) progenitor cells, and pharmacologic activation of PPAR-d recapitulates the effects of a HFD on these cells. Like a HFD, ex vivo treatment of intestinal organoid cultures with fatty acid constituents of the HFD enhances the self-renewal potential of these organoid bodies in a PPAR-d dependent manner. Interestingly, HFD- and agonist-activated PPAR-d signaling endow organoid-initiating capacity to progenitors, and enforced PPAR-d signaling permits these progenitors to form in vivo tumors upon loss of the tumor suppressor Apc. These findings highlight how diet-modulated PPAR-d activation alters not only the function of intestinal stem and progenitor cells, but also their capacity to initiate tumors
Severe Eosinophilic Endometritis Following Diagnostic Curettage
Severe Eosinophilic Endometritis appears after injury from a preoperative diagnostic procedure. It is an unusual and distinctive inflammatory uterine disease process, in response to eosinophil chemotactic substances. We report this case of a 55-year-old lady who developed severe eosinophilic endometritis following a diagnostic curettag
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Tissue IgG4-Positive Plasma Cells in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Study of 88 Treatment-Naive Biopsies of Inflammatory Bowel Disease
The distinction of Crohn's disease from ulcerative colitis is based on clinical, endoscopic, radiological, and histological findings, a paradigm that remains unchanged despite the advent of new understanding of the immunological and genetic basis of inflammatory bowel disease. There is a strong correlation between inflammatory bowel disease, predominantly ulcerative colitis, and autoimmune pancreatitis. We hypothesized that colonic biopsies from patients with inflammatory bowel disease would demonstrate increased numbers of IgG4-positive plasma cells and that this elevation might be restricted to ulcerative colitis. We examined a cohort of 78 cases of inflammatory bowel disease: 50 ulcerative colitis and 38 Crohn's disease. We identified treatment-naive biopsies. Additionally, four cases of inflammatory bowel disease associated with autoimmune pancreatitis and 15 cases of lymphocytic/collagenous colitis were also identified. Immunohistochemical stains for IgG4 were performed. Biopsies from patients with ulcerative colitis showed significantly higher numbers of IgG4-bearing plasma cells than those with Crohn's disease (mean IgG4 counts per high-power field (hpf) 9.8 vs 2.8, P=0.001). Samples from 19 (38%) ulcerative colitis patients had IgG4 counts >10/hpf, compared with only two (5%) patients with Crohn's disease; the sensitivity and specificity of a cutoff at 10 IgG4-positive plasma cells per hpf was 38 and 95%, respectively. Among individuals <18 years, there were no statistically differences in the IgG4 counts between the two subforms of inflammatory bowel disease. Among adult patients, a cutoff of 5 IgG4+ plasma cells distinguished ulcerative colitis from Crohn's disease with a sensitivity of 53% and specificity of 83%. In comparison to inflammatory bowel disease, patients with lymphocytic/collagenous colitis showed significantly lower numbers of IgG4-positive plasma cells (P=0.0001). Ulcerative colitis with pancolitis showed higher numbers of IgG4-bearing plasma cells (mean IgG4 12.8 vs 5.8 per hpf; P=0.09). An immunohistochemical stain for IgG4 may aid in making the distinction between ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease (with exclusion of the pediatric cases), albeit with a relatively low sensitivity. This study also provides additional support to the hypothesis that a subset of ulcerative colitis cases is associated with a Th2 response
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Rethinking Ormond’s Disease: “Idiopathic” Retroperitoneal Fibrosis in the Era of IgG4-Related Disease
Abstract Idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis (RPF) is a periaortic sclerotic disease that encases adjacent retroperitoneal structures, particularly the ureters. A subset of idiopathic RPF cases can be associated with IgG4-related disease, but the frequency of this association is not clear. We selected 23 cases of idiopathic RPF and identified IgG4-related RPF cases based on the presence of IgG4+ plasma cells in the tissue, using an IgG4/IgG ratio cutoff of >40%. We then compared the IgG4-related RPF patients and the non-IgG4-related RPF patients in terms of both the presence of histopathologic features typical of IgG4-related disease and the simultaneous occurrence (or history) of other organ manifestations typical of IgG4-related disease. The IgG4-related RPF and non-IgG4-related RPF groups were also analyzed in terms of clinical, laboratory, and radiologic features and treatment review. We identified 13 cases of IgG4-related RPF (57% of the total cohort). The distinguishing features of IgG4-related RPF were histopathologic and extra-organ manifestations of IgG4-related disease. The IgG4-related RPF patients were statistically more likely than non-IgG4-related RPF patients to have retroperitoneal biopsies showing lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate (p = 0.006), storiform fibrosis (p = 0.006), or tissue eosinophilia (p = 0.0002). Demographics of the 2 groups, including a middle-aged, male predominance (mean age, 58 yr; 73% male), were similar. IgG4-related disease accounts for a substantial percentage of patients with “idiopathic” RPF. Histopathologic features such as storiform fibrosis, obliterative phlebitis, and tissue eosinophilia are critical to identifying this disease association. Extraretroperitoneal manifestations of IgG4-related disease are also often present among patients with IgG4-related RPF. Elevated IgG4/total IgG ratios in tissue biopsies are more useful than the number of IgG4+ plasma cells per high-power field in cases of RPF that are highly fibrotic
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Peutz-Jeghers syndrome: a critical look at colonic Peutz-Jeghers polyps
Peutz-Jeghers syndrome is an autosomal dominant condition characterized by gastrointestinal hamartomatous polyps. The pathologic identification of a Peutz-Jeghers polyp is integral to the diagnosis of this syndrome that often remains undiagnosed until after these polyps are identified. Histologically, Peutz-Jeghers polyps are characterized by a distinctive arborization of smooth muscle within the lamina propria. Colonic Peutz-Jeghers polyps, however, may mimic mucosal prolapse polyps or virtually any colonic polyp that undergoes prolapse. In this paper, we explore the morphological features of colonic Peutz-Jeghers polyps and the diagnostic challenges associated with these polyps. Colonic polyps from patients with Peutz-Jeghers syndrome were identified (n=34). The control cohort, included mucosal prolapse polyps (n=5), hyperplastic polyps (n=10) and tubular adenomas with prolapse (n=9), ganglioneuromatous polyps (n=2) and juvenile polyps (n=14). Intramucosal smooth muscle fibers were identified in all classes of polyps. Twenty-three of the 34 colonic Peutz-Jeghers polyps were characterized by lobulated clusters of colonic crypts. On immunohistochemistry, desmin-positive smooth muscle fibers were seen surrounding these lobules. This lobular organization of the crypts was not identified in mucosal prolapse polyps and hyperplastic polyps or tubular adenomas with prolapse; only one of the 14 juvenile polyps showed this pattern of reactivity on a desmin stain. Our data suggests that the histologic hallmark of colonic Peutz-Jeghers polyps is the lobular organization of the crypts, and that an arborizing pattern of smooth muscle proliferation is neither sensitive nor a specific marker of colonic Peutz-Jeghers polyps. The presence of desmin-positive smooth muscle fibers surrounding the lobules is a helpful diagnostic feature of colonic Peutz-Jeghers polyps, and facilitates the distinction of these polyps from non-Peutz-Jeghers polyps with prolapse-like changes
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Does Autoimmune Pancreatitis Increase the Risk of Pancreatic Carcinoma?
OBJECTIVES:
To estimate the risk of malignancy in autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP).
METHODS:
We examined resected pancreata to compare the prevalence of pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN) in 28 cases of AIP and 30 cases of chronic pancreatitis not otherwise specified (CP-NOS). We also reviewed a cohort of 84 AIP cases.
RESULTS:
The mean age of the AIP cohort (57 years) was significantly higher than that of the cohort of CP-NOS (47 years) (P = 0.01). Twenty-three cases (82%) of AIP showed PanIN, and 7 cases (25%) showed grade 2 PanIN. Grade 3 PanIN was identified in one case of AIP. There was no statistically significant difference in the number of cases with high-grade PanIN lesions between the cases of type 1 as opposed to type 2 AIP. In comparison to CP-NOS, a comparable percentage of patients with AIP had PanIN (82% of AIP cases vs 63% of CP-NOS cases) (P = NS) and PanIN 2 (25% AIP vs 20% CP-NOS) (P = NS). Of the 84 AIP cases at our institution (mean follow-up, 49 months), 2 cases of pancreatic carcinoma were identified 6 and 10 years after the diagnoses of AIP.
CONCLUSIONS:
These findings raise concern that AIP is associated with an elevated risk of malignancy and should prompt additional studies
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Cutaneous mucinosis in a patient taking ustekinumab for palmoplantar psoriasis
Discrete papular lichen myxedematosus (DPLM), asubset of localized lichen myxedematosus, is a rarecutaneous mucinosis of unknown etiology. We reporta case of a 57-year-old woman with palmoplantarpsoriasis who developed DPLM 8 weeks after addingustekinumab to a long-term course of methotrexate.The patient had previously failed 2 prior tumor necrosisfactor (TNF) inhibitors, adalimumab and etanercept.This case demonstrates an association between TNFinhibitor and ustekinumab use in a psoriasis patientand localized lichen myxedematosus for the secondtime in the literature. The presented case is of interestbecause of the rare diagnosis of DPLM, especially inassociation with the start of the anti-IL 12/23 agentustekinumab. The appearance of DPLM in this settingsuggests a possible etiology for the disease
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Cystic Papillary Pattern in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma
INTRODUCTION:
The prototypic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma shows small-caliber glands that are placed within an exuberant desmoplastic stromal reaction. A number of histologic patterns have been described, and the majority of these patterns are genetically and biologically related to conventional ductal adenocarcinomas. In this report we describe our experience with a heretofore undescribed histologic pattern of pancreatic adenocarcinoma that mimics intraductal papillary mucinous carcinoma, both morphologically and radiologically.
METHODS:
We identified 10 cases of pancreatic adenocarcinoma with large-caliber malignant glands and an intraluminal papillary pattern. The demographic, clinical, radiologic, and outcome data were recorded. In addition to a review of the histologic features we also performed elastin stains, immunohistochemistry for selected oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes including SMAD4. Immunohistochemical staining for MUC proteins was also performed.
RESULTS:
The median age of the patients was 67 years, and there were 6 women and 4 men. Grossly, the cut surface in 6 of these cases showed an admixture of solid and cystic areas. The papillary cystic architecture was intimately mixed with areas of conventional adenocarcinoma, the latter characterized by invasive small-caliber tubular structures. None of the tumors showed a pure papillary cystic pattern; however, in 8 cases, this was the predominant pattern (>50% of the tumor). The cysts and papillae were lined predominantly by tall columnar hypermucinous epithelium. Elastin fibers were not identified around these dilated malignant cysts and glands. The intratumoral stroma was paucicellular and hyalinized. Seven of the 10 tumors were negative for SMAD4. The lack of pericystic elastin fibers and loss of SMAD4 in the majority of cases argue against these lesions representing an intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm. All 10 tumors stained for MUC1; focal MUC2 reactivity was noted in 1 case. The majority of cases were positive for MUC5AC (9/10) and MUC6 (8/10). Seven patients died of their disease, whereas 1 patient is alive with widely metastatic disease. Two patients were lost to follow up.
CONCLUSIONS:
The adenocarcinoma described herein is a unique morphologic pattern of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. The biology and genetics (as estimated by immunohistochemistry) are no different from that of conventional ductal adenocarcinoma but are distinctly different from tha