| Literature DB >> 22151922 |
Yoh Zen1, Dimitrios P Bogdanos, Shigeyuki Kawa.
Abstract
Before the concept of autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP) was established, this form of pancreatitis had been recognized as lymphoplasmacytic sclerosing pancreatitis or non-alcoholic duct destructive chronic pancreatitis based on unique histological features. With the discovery in 2001 that serum IgG4 concentrations are specifically elevated in AIP patients, this emerging entity has been more widely accepted. Classical cases of AIP are now called type 1 as another distinct subtype (type 2 AIP) has been identified. Type 1 AIP, which accounts for 2% of chronic pancreatitis cases, predominantly affects adult males. Patients usually present with obstructive jaundice due to enlargement of the pancreatic head or thickening of the lower bile duct wall. Pancreatic cancer is the leading differential diagnosis for which serological, imaging, and histological examinations need to be considered. Serologically, an elevated level of IgG4 is the most sensitive and specific finding. Imaging features include irregular narrowing of the pancreatic duct, diffuse or focal enlargement of the pancreas, a peri-pancreatic capsule-like rim, and enhancement at the late phase of contrast-enhanced images. Biopsy or surgical specimens show diffuse lymphoplasmacytic infiltration containing many IgG4+ plasma cells, storiform fibrosis, and obliterative phlebitis. A dramatic response to steroid therapy is another characteristic, and serological or radiological effects are normally identified within the first 2 or 3 weeks. Type 1 AIP is estimated as a pancreatic manifestation of systemic IgG4-related disease based on the fact that synchronous or metachronous lesions can develop in multiple organs (e.g. bile duct, salivary/lacrimal glands, retroperitoneum, artery, lung, and kidney) and those lesions are histologically identical irrespective of the organ of origin. Several potential autoantigens have been identified so far. A Th2-dominant immune reaction and the activation of regulatory T-cells are assumed to be involved in the underlying immune reaction. IgG4 antibodies have two unique biological functions, Fab-arm exchange and a rheumatoid factor-like activity, both of which may play immune-defensive roles. However, the exact role of IgG4 in this disease still remains to be clarified. It seems important to recognize this unique entity given that the disease is treatable with steroids.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22151922 PMCID: PMC3261813 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-6-82
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Comparison of type 1 and type 2 autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP).
| Type 1AIP | Type 2 AIP | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | Adult | Child and adult |
| Gender | Predominantly male | Almost equal |
| Serum IgG4 levels | Elevated | Normal |
| Histology | ||
| Histological nomenclature | Lymphoplasmacytic sclerosing pancreatitis (LPSP) | Idiopathic duct-centric pancreatitis |
| IgG4+ plasma cells | Many | Rare |
| Granulocytic epithelial lesion | Absent | Present |
| Relapse rate | High | Low |
| Extra-pancreatic lesions | IgG4-related disease as shown in Table 2 | Inflammatory bowel disease |
Figure 1Histological and radiological features of type 1 AIP. A: Pancreas is inflamed with inflammatory cell infiltration and storiform fibrosis (H&E, ×100). B: Inflammatory cells consist of predominantly lymphocytes and plasma cells, and occasional eosinophils (H&E, ×400). C: A vein branch is obliterated by sclerosing inflammation (obliterative phlebitis) (Elastica van Gieson, ×200). D: Many IgG4+ plasma cells are identified (IgG4 immunostaining, ×400). E: ERCP shows diffuse irregularity of the pancreatic duct. F: The pancreas is diffusely enlarged with a peri-pancreatic rim (arrows) (contrast-enhanced CT).
A list of major IgG4-related disease in various organs.
| Organ | Manifestation |
|---|---|
| Pituitary gland | Hypophysitis |
| Meningis | Pachymeningitis |
| Lacrimal gland | Chronic sclerosing dacryoadenitis (Mikulicz's disease) |
| Salivary gland | Chronic sclerosing sialadenitis (Küttner's tumour) |
| Lymph node | Lymphadenopathy with 5 histological subtypes |
| - Multicentric Castleman disease-like (type I) | |
| - Follicular hyperplasia (type II) | |
| - Interfollicular expansion (type III) | |
| - Progressive transformation of germinal centre (type IV) | |
| - Nodal inflammatory pseudotumor (type V) | |
| Thyroid | Thyroiditis or hypothyroidism |
| Skin | Pseudolymphoma |
| Breast | Inflammatory pseudotumour or mastitis |
| Lung | Inflammatory pseudotumour |
| Focal or diffuse interstitial pneumonia | |
| Inflammation in bronchovascular bundles. | |
| Pleura | Nodular pleuritis |
| Stomach | Chronic gastritis or ulcer |
| Vater's ampulla | Pseudotumourous enlargement |
| Pancreas | Type 1 autoimmune pancreatitis |
| Bile duct | Sclerosing cholangitis |
| Gallbladder | Lymphoplasmacytic sclerosing cholecystitis |
| Liver | Inflammatory pseudotumour |
| Chronic active hepatitis (autoimmune hepatitis) | |
| Retroperitoneum | Retroperitoneal fibrosis |
| Aorta/artery | Periaortitis/periarteritis |
| Inflammatory aneurysm | |
| Kidney | Tubulointerstitial nephritis |
| Peripheral nerve | Perineural mass |
Genetic susceptibility factors for AIP and clinical implications.
| Gene | Polymorphism/genotype | Implication | Population |
|---|---|---|---|
| Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) | DRB1*0405, DQB1*0401 | Increased disease susceptibility | Japanese |
| Non-aspartic acids at DQβ1 57 | Increased relapse risk | Korean | |
| Cytotoxic T lymphocyte-antigen (CTLA-4) | +49A | Increased disease susceptibility | Chinese |
| +6230G/G | Increased disease susceptibility | Japanese | |
| +6230A | Decreased disease susceptibility | Japanese | |
| +49A/A, +6230A/A | Increased relapse risk | Japanese | |
| Tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) | -893A | Other organ involvement | Chinese |
| Fc receptor-like 3 (FCRL3) | -110A/A | Increased disease susceptibility | Japanese |