Intestinal-type gastric dysplasia in Helicobacter pylori-naïve patients.
Kotaro ShibagakiAyako ItawakiYoichi MiyaokaKenichi KishimotoYusuke TakahashiSatoshi KotaniTsuyoshi MishiroNaoki OshimaKousaku KawashimaNorihisa IshimuraHideyuki OnumaMakoto NagasakiMamiko NagaseAsuka ArakiKyuichi KadotaRyoji KushimaShunji IshiharaPublished in: Virchows Archiv : an international journal of pathology (2021)
Gastric dysplasia and gastric cancer in Helicobacter pylori (Hp)-naïve patients usually exhibit a gastric phenotype, reflecting gastric mucosa without intestinal metaplasia (IM). We showed that intestinal-type gastric dysplasia (IGD) rarely occurs in the Hp-naïve stomach. In the last 10 years, we treated 1760 gastric dysplasia and gastric cancer patients, with 3.6% (63/1760) being Hp-naïve. Among these, ten were diagnosed with 14 IGDs and enrolled in this retrospective analysis. All lesions were observed by white-light endoscopy (WLE) and narrow-band imaging with magnification endoscopy (NBIME). We analyzed their endoscopic and microscopic features and patient demographics. Five men and five women aged 64 ± 21 years were included. WLE showed the depressed lesions mimicking a benign raised erosion in the prepyloric compartment. Multiple growths were confirmed in 30% (3/10) of patients. NBIME showed a near-regular microstructure and capillaries in 50% (7/14) of lesions with a gastritis-like appearance. Histologically, background mucosa was non-atrophic pyloric gland tissue, but 40.0% of samples (4/10) contained sporadic IM. Most of the lesions (8/14) were low-grade dysplasia, and others had a high-grade component, with one progressing to intramucosal carcinoma. The neoplastic surface was widely covered with foveolar epithelium in 57.1% (8/14). Immunohistochemically, neoplastic cells expressed CDX2 in all patients (14/14), MUC2 and CD10 in 92.9% (13/14), MUC5AC in 14% (2/14), and no expression of MUC6, showing an intestinal phenotype. Ki-67 was overexpressed with a mean labeling index of 58.3 ± 38.5%, and p-53 was overexpressed in 92.9% (13/14), regardless of the dysplastic grade. The IGD rarely occurs in Hp-naïve patients with distinctive clinicopathologic characteristics.
Keyphrases
- helicobacter pylori
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- low grade
- ejection fraction
- high grade
- chronic kidney disease
- prognostic factors
- type diabetes
- peritoneal dialysis
- poor prognosis
- patient reported outcomes
- pregnant women
- induced apoptosis
- skeletal muscle
- cell death
- early onset
- insulin resistance
- radiation therapy
- lymph node
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- pi k akt
- photodynamic therapy
- late onset
- signaling pathway
- long non coding rna