| Literature DB >> 22240650 |
Marta C Cohen1, Prithviraj Rao, Mike Thomson, Mudher Al-Adnani.
Abstract
Objectives Eosinophilic oesophagitis (EO) shows eosinophilic infiltration of the mucosa and can present with symptoms indistinguishable from gastrooesophageal reflux disease (GORD). The authors describe the clinical, endoscopic and histopathological features of all cases of histological EO presenting during 2007-2008 with a 2-year follow-up. The incidence of paediatric EO and the features of a subgroup with features of both GORD and EO ('overlap' syndrome (OS)) are described. Design Biopsies with an average of 15 eosinophils/high-power field (HPF) were reviewed in the cohort. OS was suggested when there was coexistence of clinical and histological features of EO and GORD (abnormal pH study), which improved with proton pump inhibitors. Setting Tertiary care. Participants All cases with ≥15 eosinophils/HPF entered the study. Primary outcome measures Patients with EO had an average of 15 eosinophils/HPF. Secondary outcome measures Other histological features of EO included microabscesses, dilated intercellular spaces, basal cell hyperplasia, papillary elongation, etc. Results 24 cases of EO were identified, 13 men and 11 women. The incidence of paediatric oesophageal eosinophilia in the region was 9/100 000 children. 11 of the 24 patients (46%) presented with some form of allergy, six with poor feeding/food aversion, five with dysphagia and four with vomiting. After follow-up, 56.5% were confirmed to have EO, 30.5% responded to treatment for GORD and were categorised as OS, 9% developed eosinophilic gastroenteritis and 4% did not have further upper gastrointestinal symptoms. Conclusions Accurate diagnosis of EO, especially the differentiation from GORD, requires appropriate clinicopathological correlation. A significant proportion of patients with eosinophilia in the mucosa also have GORD (OS). These patients improve after treating the underlying GORD. The study was registered as a Service Evaluation with the Trust (number SE74).Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22240650 PMCID: PMC3278487 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2011-000493
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Demographic features, clinical history and endoscopic characteristics of the cohort children with oesophageal eosinophilia on histology
| Case | Age | Sex | History | Endoscopy | Clinical Dx pre-biopsy result |
| 1 | 23 m | M | Allergy, eczema, asthma, feeding problems | Corrugated, furrowing, trachealisation | EO |
| 2 | 44 m | M | Dysphagia, intractable asthma | Corrugated, furrowing | EO |
| 3 | 35 m | F | Reflux, food aversion | Furrowing, ridging | GORD |
| 4 | 51 m | F | Failure to thrive, feeding problems, developmental delay, epilepsy | Normal | GORD |
| 5 | 9 y | F | Poor weight gain, epigastric pain | Normal | GORD |
| 6 | 19 m | M | No weight gain, poor appetite | Normal | ?GORD or non-ulcer dyspepsia |
| 7 | 39 m | F | Feeding problems, Russell–Silver syndrome, food aversion | White speckles, ?Candida oesophagitis | ?GORD |
| 8 | 15 y | M | Epigastric pain | Severe oesophagitis | ?GORD |
| 9 | 6 m | F | Vomiting and mucosy diarrhoea, asthma | No information available | GORD |
| 10 | 15 y | M | Dysphagia, GORD | Normal | ?GORD |
| 11 | 23 m | M | Allergy, eczema, asthma, feeding problems | Furrowing, trachealisation | ?EO |
| 12 | 15 m | F | ?GORD | Normal | ?GORD |
| 13 | 13 y | M | Heartburn, difficulty swallowing solids/liquids, family history of peptic ulcer | Furrowing | ?GORD |
| 14 | 16 m | F | ?Cow milk protein intolerance | Normal | ?CMPA |
| 15 | 12 y | M | Asthma, eczema, food bolus obstruction | Furrowing | Achalasia of the cardia. ?EO |
| 16 | 11 y | M | Food bolus obstruction | Normal, pre-pyloric ulcer | Gastritis |
| 17 | 12 m | F | ?CMPA | ?Candida oesophagitis | ?CMPA |
| 18 | 14 y | F | Asthma, eczema | Furrowing | ?EO |
| 19 | 6 m | M | Failure to thrive, diarrhoea. ?protein-loosing enteropathy | Normal | Likely CMPA |
| 20 | 42 m | F | Abdominal pain, ?coeliac disease, low IgA, poor weight gain | Normal | Iron deficiency aneamia, ?coeliac disease |
| 21 | 14 y | M | Diarrhoea | Furrowing | ?EO |
| 22 | 10 y | F | Heartburn, reflux, vomiting | Trachealisation | ?GORD |
| 23 | 16 m | M | Vomiting | Oesophagitis | ?GORD |
| 24 | 11 m | M | Vomiting, failure to thrive, medulloblastoma in remission | Corrugated and furrowed oesophagus, trachealisation | ?EO, ?GORD |
CMPA, cow milk protein allergy; Dx, diagnosis; EO, eosinophilic oesophagitis; F, female; GORD, gastrooesophageal reflux disease; m, months; M, male; y, year?: suspected clinical diagnosis.
Pre- and post-biopsy diagnosis and initial clinical management of the cohort
| Case | Clinical diagnosis (pre-biopsy) | PPI trial (pre- or post-biopsy) | pH study | Clinical diaxnosis post-biopsy |
| 1 | EO | Y (post) | Normal | EO |
| 2 | EO | Y (post) | Normal | EO |
| 3 | GORD | Y (pre) | Normal | EO |
| 4 | GORD | Y (pre) | ND | EO + GORD (OS) |
| 5 | GORD | Y (pre) | Normal | EO |
| 6 | ?GORD or non-ulcer dyspepsia | Y (post) | ND | EO |
| 7 | ?GORD | Y (pre) | Abnormal reflux index of 13% | EO + GORD (OS) |
| 8 | ?GORD | Y (pre) | Abnormal reflux index of 8.8% | EO + GORD (OS) |
| 9 | GORD | Y (pre) | Abnormal reflux index of 19.6% | EO + GORD (OS) |
| 10 | ?GORD | Y (pre) | Normal | EO + GORD |
| 11 | ?EO | Y (post) | ND | EO |
| 12 | ?GORD | Y (post) | Normal | EO |
| 13 | ?GORD | Y (pre) | Abnormal reflux index of 12.2% | EO + GORD (OS) |
| 14 | ?CMPA | Y (post) | Normal | EO |
| 15 | Achalasia of the cardia? EO | Y (pre) | ND | EO |
| 16 | Gastritis | Y (pre) | ND | EO |
| 17 | ?CMPA | Y (post) | Abnormal reflux index of 16.8% | EO + GORD (OS) |
| 18 | ?EO | Y (post) | Abnormal reflux index of 10.7% | EO + GORD (OS) |
| 19 | Likely CMPA | ND | ND | EO |
| 20 | Iron deficiency aneamia, ?coeliac disease | ND | ND | EO |
| 21 | ?EO | Y (pre) | ND | EO |
| 22 | ?GORD | Y (pre) | 173 reflux episodes/24 h (normal is <75) | EO + GORD (OS) |
| 23 | ?GORD | Y (pre) | Normal | EO |
| 24 | ?EO, ?GORD | Y (pre) | ND | EO |
CMPA, cow milk protein allergy; EO, eosinophilic oesophagitis; GORD, gastrooesophageal reflux disease; N, no; ND, not done; OS, overlap syndrome; PPI, proton pump inhibitor; Y, yes; ?, suspected clinical diagnosis.
Figure 1(A) Endoscopic appearance of eosinophilic oesophagitis (EO) showing ‘trachealisation’ of the oesophagus and white speckles (*); (B) biopsy from the middle oesophagus depicting 53 eosinophils/high-power field. These were located towards the surface of the mucosa (H&E ×40, case 2). (C) Dilatation of the intercellular spaces (curved arrow), papillary elongation and basal cell hyperplasia were frequent changes present in biopsies with EO (H&E ×40, case 4). (D) Microabscesses containing more than four eosinophils present near the surface of the mucosa (arrow) (H&E ×40, case 10).
Initial clinical diagnosis (pre-biopsy) and histological features present in the cohort group
| Case | Clinical Dx pre-biopsy | E/HPF (biopsy site) | DIS | Basal cell hyperplasia | Cell vacuolisation | Squiggle cells | Papillary elongation |
| 1 | EO | 5 (P), 33 (D) | + | + | + | Not increased | + |
| 2 | EO | 55 (P, M, D) | +++ | +++ | +++ | Not increased | +++ |
| 3 | GORD | 16 (un) | +++ | +++ | ++ | Increased | ++ |
| 4 | GORD | 50 (un) | +++ | +++ | ++ | Not increased | +++ |
| 5 | GORD | 40 (D) | No | + | No | Not increased | No |
| 6 | ?GORD or non-ulcer dyspepsia | 22 (un) | +++ | ++ | ++ | Increased | No |
| 7 | ?GORD | 46 (un) | +++ | +++ | +++ | Not increased | +++ |
| 8 | ?GORD | 30 (P, D) | +++ | +++ | +++ | Increased | +++ |
| 9 | GORD | 0 (P) 24 (D) | +++ | + | + | Not increased | + |
| 10 | ?GORD | 40 (D) | +++ | +++ | +++ | Increased | +++ |
| 11 | ?EO | 30 (P), 50 (D) | ++ | ++ | ++ | Not increased | ++ |
| 12 | ?GORD | 35 (D) | ++ | ++ | ++ | Not increased | ++ |
| 13 | ?GORD | 30 (P), 20 (M), 20 (D) | ++ | ++ | ++ | Mild increase | ++ |
| 14 | ?CMPA | 4 (P) | 0 | 0 | 0 | Not increased | 0 |
| 35 (D) | +++ | +++ | +++ | Not increased | +++ | ||
| 15 | Achalasia cardia, ?EO | 25 (P), 34 (D) | ++ | ++ | ++ | Not increased, increased | +++ |
| 16 | Gastritis | 40 (un) | +++ | +++ | +++ | Not increased | ++ |
| 17 | ?CMPA | 24 (un) | ++ | ++ | ++ | Not increased | ++ |
| 18 | ?EO | 26 (P), 43 (D) | +++ | +++ | +++ | Increased, not increased | +++ |
| 19 | Failure to thrive | 21 (un) | + | + | + | Not increased | 0 |
| 20 | Iron deficiency aneamia, ?coeliac disease | 25 (un) | + | 0 | 0 | Not increased | 0 |
| 21 | ?EO | 15 (un) | + | +++ | + | Increased | +++ |
| 22 | ?GORD | 16 (P), | 0 | + | 0 | Increased | ++ |
| 57 (D) | +++ | +++ | +++ | Increased | +++ | ||
| 23 | ?GORD | 45 (un) | + | + | + | Not increased | 0 |
| 24 | ?EO ?GORD | 46 | +++ | ++ | ++ | Increased | + |
Microabscesses; +, mild; ++, moderate; +++, marked.
CMPA, cow milk protein allergy; D, distal; DIS, dilatation of intercellular space; Dx, diagnosis; E/HPF, eosinophils/high-power field (40×); EO, eosinophilic oesophagitis; GORD, gastrooesophageal reflux disease; M, middle; P, proximal; un, unknown; ?, suspected clinical diagnosis.
Clinical diagnosis, treatment and follow-up of up to 4 years
| Case | Pre-treatment clinical diagnosis (after biopsy) | Treatment and follow-up (2009–2011) | Final clinical diagnosis |
| 1 | EO | Initial histological response to anti-IL-5 for up to 6 months but then rebound EO warranting treatment with 6 weeks of exclusive elemental feed with good clinical and histological response. Symptoms have now rebound and currently on introduction of dietary protein. Feed aversive behaviour. Atopy. | EO |
| 2 | EO | Initial clinical and histological response to egg-, wheat-, banana- and nut-free diet. However, with worsening asthma, his symptoms have re-surfaced, i.e., vomiting and low appetite with some clinical response to leucotriene receptor antagonist. | EO |
| 3 | EO | Exclusion diet. Gradual improvement of symptoms and at discharged from care at 2 years. | EO |
| 4 | EO + GORD (OS) | Clinical improvement in symptoms with long-term PPI and domperidone at 2-year follow-up was gradually being weaned off PPI at 2-year follow-up. | GORD (OS) |
| 5 | EO | Short-term PPI and gradually weaned off by 1 year of age. | GORD (OS) |
| 6 | EO | Some clinical response to dairy-free diet but then went onto develop feed aversive behaviour and slow transit constipation on follow-up at 2 years. Parents not keen on re-assessment scope as dietary restriction very difficult due to behavioural difficulties. | EO |
| 7 | EO + GORD (OS) | Had a gastrostomy. With improvement in nutrition and weight gain, significant improvement in asthma and gastrointestinal symptoms and discharged from care at 2-year follow-up. | EO |
| 8 | EO + GORD (OS) | PPI treatment for 6 months with resolution of symptoms. | GORD (OS) |
| 9 | EO +GORD (OS) | Initial clinical response to 6-week elemental feed regime and gradual reintroduction of proteins in diet over 3 months. Kept on PPI for 1 year and weaned off by 2nd year. No gastrointestinal or respiratory symptoms at 2-year follow-up. | GORD (OS) |
| 10 | EO + GORD (OS) | Stayed on PPI with partial control of symptoms and care then transferred to adult gastroenterologist. | GORD (OS) |
| 11 | EO | Given a trial of PPI with no improvement in symptoms of vomiting, feed aversion and eczema. Then found to have multiple food allergies on RAST testing. At 6 months of age, put on six protein-free diet (milk, soya, egg, nuts, fish and wheat) with complete resolution of symptoms by 9 months. On reintroduction was symptomatic with milk, soya, eggs and wheat but asymptomatic with other nuts and fish. Discharged from gastro follow-up at 14 months. | EO |
| 12 | EO | EO identified at the time of gastrostomy insertion along with significant acid reflux. Trial of PPI had some improvement but no resolution. Later Neocate and dairy/soya-free diet with both clinical and histological resolution at 9 months post-diagnosis. She then went into adoption and care was transferred. | GORD (OS) |
| 13 | EO + GORD (OS) | Persistence of symptoms despite of topical steroids. At 2-year follow-up, was commenced on oral steroids and had a clinical response to his dysphagia. | EO |
| 14 | EO | Subsequently developed eosinophilic gastroenteritis. Excellent response to dairy-free diet on follow-up. | Eosinophilic gastroenteritis |
| 15 | EO | Initial poor response to topical budesonide. Subsequently symptomatic improvement on six protein elimination diet. | EO |
| 16 | EO | Partial response to PPI but had PEG inserted during the same procedure. After 6-week trial of PPI, went onto Neocate (elemental feed) for 6 weeks. At 18 months dairy and soya reintroduced in diet with tolerance. | EO |
| 17 | EO + GORD (OS) | Lost to follow-up. | |
| 18 | EO + GORD (OS) | Partial response to PPI alone and then subsequently put on dairy-free diet with clinical improvement in symptoms. Gradually weaned off PPI and at 2 years back onto dairy with no recurrence of symptoms. | GORD (OS) |
| 19 | EO | Subsequently developed eosinophilic gastroenteritis. Good response to dairy-, soya- and wheat-free diet. | Eosinophilic gastroenteritis |
| 20 | EO | Persistently positive coeliac serology. Re-scoped after 18 months on a gluten-containing diet with no evidence of coeliac disease but persistence of EO. Symptoms of pain did not improve on dairy- or wheat-free diet and was put on topical budesonide with some positive response. | EO |
| 21 | EO | No upper gastrointestinal I symptoms after histological diagnosis. Only had intermittent diarrhoea, which was subsequently diagnosed as having irritable bowel syndrome and responded well to Mebeverine and Loperamide. | Irritable bowel syndrome |
| 22 | EO + GORD (OS) | Initial lack of response to PPI and anti-histamine but at 2-year follow-up responded to dairy-free diet. | EO |
| 23 | EO | Improvement on dairy- and soya-free diet. Symptoms appear to be re-surfacing on reintroduction of soya. Due to a repeat endoscopy. | EO |
| 24 | EO | No improvement in symptoms on dairy-free diet and some response to topical budesonide gel. Lost to follow-up. | EO |
EO, eosinophilic oesophagitis; GORD, gastrooesophageal reflux disease; IL-5, interleukin 5; OS, overlap syndrome; PPI, proton pump inhibitor; RAST test, radioallergosorbent test.