| Literature DB >> 30968266 |
Takashi Nagaishi1, Daiki Yamada2, Kohei Suzuki2, Ryosuke Fukuyo3, Eiko Saito2, Masayoshi Fukuda2, Taro Watabe2, Naoya Tsugawa2, Kengo Takeuchi4, Kouhei Yamamoto5, Ayako Arai6,7, Kazuo Ohtsuka2, Mamoru Watanabe2.
Abstract
Chronic diarrhea is one of the major symptoms in gastroenterology. However, this may be caused by pathologic conditions for which the diagnosis is critical. Villous atrophy, as an endoscopic lesion, accompanied by chronic diarrhea can occasionally be observed in the patients with inflammatory diseases of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Herein, we present a case with persistent diarrhea accompanied by intestinal wall thickening without any other significant endoscopic features other than villous atrophy in the jejunum and the ileum, where we diagnosed as an indolent T cell lymphoproliferative disorder (T-LPD) of the GI tract, defined in the 2016-2017 revised World Health Organization classification, via single-balloon enteroscopy (SBE). Interestingly, we found the same lymphocyte infiltration from the distal third portion of the duodenum, where gastroscopy could not reach, via SBE, even though no endoscopic findings were observed such as villous atrophy. Since infiltrating cells in the intestinal tissues were CCR4+, mogamulizumab was administered with resulting durable symptomatic remission for more than 2 years. Patients with persistent diarrhea may have serious small intestinal disorder including not only chronic inflammatory diseases but also lymphoid neoplasmic conditions including T-LPD of GI tract.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic diarrhea; Indolent T cell lymphoproliferative disorder of the gastrointestinal tract; Mogamulizumab; Single-balloon enteroscopy; Villous atrophy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30968266 PMCID: PMC6763404 DOI: 10.1007/s12328-019-00971-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1865-7265
Laboratory data
| Hematology | Biochemistry | Serology | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WBC | 7.4 | × 103/µL | TP | 7.0 | g/dL | HBs Ag | Negative |
| Neu | 38.6 | % | Alb | 3.4 | g/dL | HCV Ab | Negative |
| Lym | 50.2 | % | BUN | 23 | mg/dL | HTLV1 Ab | Negative |
| Mono | 8.7 | % | Cre | 1.24 | mg/dL | ||
| Eosino | 2.0 | % | UA | 5.9 | mg/dL | ||
| Baso | 0.5 | % | Na | 142 | mEq/L | ||
| Aty Lym | 0.0 | % | K | 4.7 | mEq/L | ||
| RBC | 549 | × 104/µL | Cl | 105 | mEq/L | ||
| Hb | 16.4 | g/dL | Ca | 8.7 | mg/dL | ||
| Ht | 48.4 | % | LDH | 167 | U/L | ||
| MCV | 88.2 | fl | AST | 18 | U/L | ||
| MCH | 29.9 | pg | ALT | 30 | U/L | ||
| MCHC | 33.9 | g/dL | γ-GTP | 17 | U/L | ||
| Plt | 19.5 | × 104/µL | ALP | 225 | U/L | ||
| ESR | 63 | mm/hr | T Bil | 0.6 | mg/dL | ||
| TG | 88 | mg/dL | |||||
| T Cho | 140 | mg/dL | |||||
| Amy | 109 | U/L | |||||
| Lip | 35 | U/L | |||||
| Glu | 119 | mg/dL | |||||
| HbA1c | 5.6 | % | |||||
| CRP | 1.83 | mg/dL | |||||
| CEA | 2.8 | ng/mL | |||||
| sIL-2R | 1470 | U/mL |
Fig. 1CT of pelvis without (a) and with contrast (b). Arrow and arrowhead point to the thickened wall of small intestine and the swollen lymph nodes, respectively
Fig. 2Endoscopic appearances of jejunum. Observations with normal view (a), indigo carmine solution (b), narrow band imaging (c), and crystal violet staining (d) are shown, respectively
Fig. 3Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained histological features of SBE biopsy. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded SBE biopsy specimens were sectioned, and then stained with H&E. a Low power view shows the loss of villous architecture and severe infiltration with small cells in the lamina propria and the submucosal layers of jejunum. b High power magnification reveals infiltrating mononuclear cells with mild nuclear grade
Fig. 4Immunophenotypical analysis of the infiltrating cells. Serial sections from Fig. 3 were stained with Abs against either CD3 (a), CD5 (b), CD7 (c), or Ki-67 (d), respectively
Fig. 5Whole-body FDG-PET imaging. Abnormal FDG uptake was not detected by PET in the patient’s body, including GI tract and lymph nodes. Arrow points to the enlarged small intestine
Fig. 6CCR4 expressions in the jejunum. The SBE specimens were applied for IHC with anti-CCR4 Ab