| Literature DB >> 33179621 |
Vincenzo Villanacci1, Alessandro Vanoli2,3, Giuseppe Leoncini4, Giovanni Arpa2,3, Tiziana Salviato5, Luca Reggiani Bonetti5, Carla Baronchelli1, Luca Saragoni6, Paola Parente7.
Abstract
Celiac disease is a multi-factorial chronic inflammatory intestinal disease, characterized by malabsorption resulting from mucosal injury after ingestion of wheat gluten or related rye and barley proteins. Inappropriate T-cell-mediated immune response against ingested gluten in genetically predisposed people, leads to characteristic histological lesions, as villous atrophy and intraepithelial lymphocytosis. Nevertheless, celiac disease is a comprehensive diagnosis with clinical, serological and genetic characteristics integrated with histological features. Biopsy of duodenal mucosa remains the gold standard in the diagnosis of celiac disease with the recognition of the spectrum of histological changes and classification of mucosa damage based on updated Corazza-Villanacci system. Appropriate differential diagnosis evaluation and clinical context also for the diagnosis of complications is, moreover, needed for correct histological features interpretation and clinical management.Entities:
Keywords: celiac disease; gluten; small bowel; sprue
Year: 2020 PMID: 33179621 PMCID: PMC7931573 DOI: 10.32074/1591-951X-157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathologica ISSN: 0031-2983
Comparison of Marsh - Corazza-Villanacci - Villanacci classification schemes.
| Marsh mod. Oberhuber | Corazza-Villanacci | Villanacci | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lesions | Diagnostic Criteria | Lesions | Lesions |
| No architectural changes | |||
| No architectural changes | |||
| Villous atrophy | |||
| Villous atrophy | |||
| Villous atrophy | |||
Figure 1.(A-B): normal duodenal mucosa; villous/crypt ratio over 3:1; number of T lymphocytes < 25 x 100 epithelial cells. (A) H&E x 10, (B) CD3 immunostain x 10. (C-D): Type 1 - Grade A lesion; normal villi but with pathological increase of T lymhocytes > 25 x 100 epithelail cells. (C) H&E x 20, (D) CD3 immunostain x 20. (E-F): mild to moderate villous atrophy Type 3A-3B - Grade B1 with pathological increase of T lymphocytes. (E) H&E x 20, (F) CD3 immunostain x 20. (G-H): severe villous atrophy Type 3C - Grade B2 with pathological increase of T lymphocytes. (G) H&E x 20, (H) CD3 immunostain x 20.
Figure 2.(A-B): normal villi; T lymphocytes < 25 x 100 epithelial cells. (A) H&E x 10, (B) CD3 immunostain x 10. (C-D): cluster of T Lymphocytes in the superficial epithelium. (C-D) CD3 immunostain x 60 red rectangle. (E-F): linear disposition of T lymphocytes in the deeper part of the mucosa. CD3 immunostain x 4 red rectangle. (G-H): eosinophils in lamina propria.
Major CD non-neoplastic mimickers and histopathologic features useful for differential diagnosis.
| Mimicker | Increased IELs | Villous atrophy | Histopathologic tips for differential diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rare (in children) | Rare (in children) | Identification of parasites (e.g. | |
| Possible | Possible, mild (if present) | Foveolar metaplasia of the duodenum; increased plasma cells in lamina propria; neutrophilic infiltration in lamina propria and epithelium; changes more prominent in the bulbus; | |
| Yes | Yes, usually low-grade | Extensive ileal involvement | |
| Yes | Possible | Mild lesions | |
| Rare | Yes | PAS-positive macrophages in lamina propria | |
| Yes | Possible, variable grade | Mucosal recovery after infection resolution | |
| Possible | Rare, patchy, mild | Erosions, neutrophilic infiltration in lamina propria | |
| Rare | Possible | Crypt architectural distortion; neutrophilic infiltration in lamina propria; foci of crypt apoptosis; involvement of other gastrointestinal tracts (gastritis, colitis) | |
| Possible | Frequent, variable grade | Neutrophilic infiltration in lamina propria; deposition of subepithelial collagen, foci of crypt apoptosis | |
| Yes | Frequent, variable grade | Deposition of subepithelial collagen | |
| Yes | Possible, variable grade | Depletion of plasma cells in lamina propria, follicular lymphoid hyperplasia; concomitant giardiasis | |
| Possible (celiac pattern) | Yes, variable grade | Neutrophilic infiltration in lamina propria; crypt apoptosis; reduction in goblet and Paneth cells; diffuse involvement of other gastrointestinal tracts (gastritis, enteritis, colitis) | |
| Rare | Rare, patchy (if present) | Erosions/ulcerations, neutrophilic inflammation; crypt distortion; microgranulomas; basal plasmacytosis; ileal and colonic involvement | |
| Possible | Possible, usually not severe | Increased eosinophils in lamina propria; involvement of other gastrointestinal tracts (enteritis and colitis) | |
Legend: ARB: angiotension receptor blocker; CVID: common variable immunodeficiencies; HP: Helicobacter pylori; IEL: intraepithelial lymphocyte; NSAID: non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug; PAS: periodic acid Schiff.
Figure 3.(A-B): collagenous sprue; pathological increase in the thickness of the connective tissue band under the superficial epithelium > 10 mμ; (A) H&E x 20; (B) Trichrome stain x 20. (C-D): refractory celiac disease; pathological increase of T lymphocytes CD3 positive (C) negativity for CD8 (D). C-D x 20. (E-F): enteropathy type T cell lymphoma; (E) x 4, (F) H&E x 40; (G) CD3 immunostain x 40.