| Literature DB >> 28246468 |
Carol Rouphael1, Ilyssa O Gordon1, Prashanthi N Thota1.
Abstract
Lymphocytic esophagitis (LE) is a clinicopathologic entity first described by Rubio et al in 2006. It is defined as peripapillary intraepithelial lymphocytosis with spongiosis and few or no granulocytes on esophageal biopsy. This definition is not widely accepted and the number of lymphocytes needed to make the diagnosis varied in different studies. Multiple studies have described potential clinical associations and risk factors for LE, such as old age, female gender and smoking history. This entity was reported in inflammatory bowel disease in the pediatric population but not in adults. Other associations include gastroesophageal reflux disease and primary esophageal motility disorders. The most common symptom is dysphagia, with a normal appearing esophagus on endoscopy, though esophageal rings, webs, nodularities, furrows and strictures have been described. Multiple treatment modalities have been used such as proton pump inhibitors and topical steroids. Esophageal dilation seems to be therapeutic when dysphagia is present along with esophageal narrowing secondary to webs, rings or strictures. The natural history of the disease remains unclear and needs to be better delineated. Overall, lymphocytic esophagitis seems to have a chronic and benign course, except for two cases of esophageal perforation in the literature, thought to be secondary to this entity.Entities:
Keywords: CD4 T-cells; Lymphocytic esophagitis; dysphagia; esophageal dilation; esophageal rings; gastroesophageal reflux disease; inflammatory bowel disease; intraepithelial lymphocytes; proton pump inhibitors; spongiosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28246468 PMCID: PMC5311104 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v23.i6.949
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Figure 1Histopathologic findings in lymphocytic esophagitis: increased peripapillary intraepithelial lymphocytes with spongiosis (hematoxylin and eosin stain; × 20 magnification).
Figure 2Endoscopy showing narrowed esophagus with subtle strictures.
Summary of retrospective studies on lymphocytic esophagitis
| Rubio et al[ | 20 | Female: 10; Male: 10 | 31.3 Range: (2-28) | Crohn’s disease, asthma, liver cirrhosis, Sclerosing cholangitis | Not available |
| Purdy et al[ | 42 | Not Available | 44 Range: (2-81) | Allergies (drug and non-drug), | Not available |
| Xue et al[ | 45 (21 LE-NG) (24 LE-FG) | LE-NG: Female: 15; Male: 7 LE-FG: Female: 15; Male: 9 | LE-NG: 59 ± 12 LE-FG: 65 ± 13 | Motility abnormalities | Not available |
| Putra et al[ | 10/22 with nutcracker esophagus 7/33 with ineffective motility 5/14 with diffuse esophageal spasm | Nutcracker esophagus: Female: 11; Male: 11 Ineffective motility: Female: 20; Male: 13 Ineffective motility: Female: 8; Male: 6 | Nutcracker Esophagus: 54 ± 11 Ineffective motility: 56 ± 14 Diffuse spasm: 62 ± 11 | Nutcracker esophagus, ineffective motility, diffuse esophageal spasm | Diltiazem Proton pump inhibitors Botulinum toxin Peppermint Nitroglycerin sublingual |
| Kissiedu et al[ | 33 | Female: 6; Male: 27 | 67 ± 10 | Smoking, hyperlipidemia, cryotherapy, radio- frequency ablation, endoscopic mucosal resection | Not available |
| Pasricha et al[ | 27 | Female: 17; Male: 10 | 56 ± 16 | IBD, GERD, Barrett’s esophagus, achalasia, drug allergy, asthma, eczema, IBS, cancer, tobacco, alcohol, drug use | Proton pump inhibitors Fluticasone GI cocktail (maalox, donnatal, lidocaine) Prednisone taper |
| Cohen et al[ | 81 | Female: 44; Male: 37 | 51 Range: (19-84) | GERD, achalasia, allergies, asthma, eczema, IBD, hypothyroidism, alcohol use, tobacco use | Proton pump inhibitors Anti-tumor necrosis factor agent |
| Basseri et al[ | 4/47 patients with IBD | Female: 23; Male: 24 | 39.3 ± 14.6 | GERD, asthma, IBD, diabetes mellitus, celiac disease, smoking, alcohol use | Not available |
| Sutton et al[ | 31 | Female: 15; Male: 16 | 8.9 | Crohn’s disease, GERD, Infectious/inflammatory disorders, Polyps/neoplasms, Immune disorders, mechanical disorders, functional abdominal pain | Not available |
| Ebach et al[ | Crohn’s and LymphocyticEsophagitis: 17 out of 60 patients with Crohn’s | Crohn’s disease patients: Female: 17; Male: 43 | Crohn’s disease patients: 13.3 Range: (4.7-20.7) | IBD | Not available |
| Haque et al[ | 119 | Female: 72; Male: 47 | 63 (Median) | Not available |
Age expressed as mean ± SD, unless otherwise stated. LE-NG: Lymphocytic esophagitis-no granulocytes; LE-FG: Lymphocytic esophagitis-few granulocytes; IBS: Inflammatory bowel syndrome; IBD: Inflammatory bowel disease; GERD: Gastroesophageal reflux disease.
Summary of case reports on lymphocytic esophagitis
| Figueiredo et al[ | 30 | Male | Behçet’s disease | Endoscopic dilation |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | Swallowed fluticasone | |||
| Mandaliya et al[ | 74 | Male | Lymphoma | Endoscopic dilation |
| Esophagitis | Botox injections | |||
| Zhang et al[ | 66 | Female | Opioid overdose | Omeprazole 40 mg twice daily |
| Maejima et al[ | 68 | Male | Food impaction | Endoscopic dilation |
| Niewiarowski et al[ | 82 | Female | Acute food impaction | Not available |
| Vangimalla et al[ | 67 | Male | Common variable immune deficiency | Acid suppression |
| Endoscopic dilation | ||||
| Hendy et al[ | 35 | Female | Not available | Topical steroids (fluticasone) |