| Literature DB >> 26689786 |
Won Jae Huh1, Robert J Coffey2, Mary Kay Washington1.
Abstract
Ménétrier's disease is a rare protein-losing hypertrophic gastropathy. Histologically, it can be mistaken for other disorders showing hypertrophic gastropathy. The pathogenesis of Ménétrier's disease is not fully understood; however, it appears that the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) ligand, transforming growth factor alpha, contributes to the pathogenesis of this disorder. In this review, we will discuss disease entities that can mimic Ménétrier's disease and the role of EGFR signaling in Ménétrier's disease.Entities:
Keywords: Gastric polyp; Ménétrier’s disease; Transforming growth factor alpha
Year: 2015 PMID: 26689786 PMCID: PMC4734964 DOI: 10.4132/jptm.2015.09.15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol Transl Med ISSN: 2383-7837
Fig. 1.Endoscopic appearance of Ménétrier’s disease and juvenile polyposis syndrome. (A) Gastric body of Ménétrier’s disease patient with diffuse hypertrophic gastric folds. (B) Gastric antrum of the same patient is not involved. (C) Gastric body of juvenile polyposis syndrome patient with multiple sessile polyps. (D) Juvenile polyps in the duodenum.
Fig. 2.Histologic comparison of Ménétrier’s disease and gastric polyps. (A) Ménétrier’s disease shows foveolar hyperplasia with corkscrew morphology and cystically dilated deep glands; however, overall linear architecture is maintained. (B) Juvenile polyp shows foveolar hyperplasia with cystically dilated superficial and deep glands. Linear architecture is disrupted. (C) Peutz-Jeghers polyp shows foveolar hyperplasia and cystically dilated glands. Lamina propria of Ménétrier’s disease shows strands of smooth muscle bundles (D) whereas lamina propria of juvenile polyp is edematous without prominent smooth muscle (E). (F) Peutz-Jeghers polyp shows arborizing smooth muscle strands in the lamina propria, which is less prominent than counterparts in small intestine or colon.
Differential diagnosis of Ménétrier’s disease
| Diagnosis | Distribution | Location in stomach | Hyperplastic mucosal compartment | Pathologic features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ménétrier’s disease | Diffuse | Body and fundus; relative sparing of antrum | Foveolar epithelium | Massive foveolar hyperplasia |
| Hypertrophic lymphocytic gastritis | Diffuse | Body and fundus; relative sparing of antrum | Foveolar epithelium | Prominent intraepithelial lymphocytes |
| Hypertrophic hypersecretory gastropathy | Diffuse | Body and fundus; atrophic antrum | All layers | Hyperplasia of all glandular compartments |
| Zollinger-Ellison syndrome | Diffuse | Body and fundus | Parietal cells | Parietal cell hyperplasia |
| Hyperplastic polyp | Focal | Antrum; body and fundus also possible | Foveolar epithelium | Foveolar hyperplasia with architectural distortion |
| Polyposis syndrome with hamartomatous polyps | Variable | Body, fundus, and antrum | Foveolar epithelium | Features similar to hyperplastic polyp |
| Gastric adenocarcinoma and proximal polyposis of the stomach | Variable | Body and fundus | Oxyntic glands | Fundic gland polyps with low and high-grade dysplasia |
| Diffuse gastric carcinoma | Variable | Body, fundus, and antrum | Not applicable | Infiltrating carcinoma; diffuse type |
| Lymphoma | Variable | Body, fundus, and antrum | Not applicable | Effacement of gastric mucosa by infiltrating lymphoma cells |
| Amyloidosis | Variable | Body, fundus, and antrum | Not applicable | Acellular, amorphous eosinophilic material surrounding glands and vessels |
Microscopic features of Ménétrier’s disease, hyperplastic polyp, and juvenile polyp in the gastric body/fundus
| Feature | Ménétrier’s disease | Hyperplastic polyp | Juvenile polyp |
|---|---|---|---|
| Foveolar epithelium | Massive foveolar hyperplasia and surface erosion | Foveolar hyperplasia and surface erosion | Foveolar hyperplasia, ulceration, reactive changes |
| Oxyntic glands | Decreased number of parietal and chief cells | Unremarkable | Unremarkable |
| Glandular architecture | Tortuous foveolar epithelium and cystically dilated deeper glands; overall linear architecture is maintained | Cystically dilated and disorganized foveolar epithelium; linear architecture is maintained in deeper glands | Cystically dilated and disorganized foveolar epithelium and deeper glands |
| Lamina propria | Chronic inflammation with scattered clusters of eosinophils; scattered strands of smooth muscles | Lymphoid aggregates and mixed inflammation; scattered strands of smooth muscles; edematous | Mixed inflammation with numerous small congested vessels; edematous |
| Gland to stromal ratio | High | Low | Low |
Fig. 3.Immunohistochemistry of phosphorylated EGFR (pEGFR). Hyperplastic foveolar epithelium of both Ménétrier’s disease (A) and juvenile polyp (B) shows membranous pEGFR staining.