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Characterization of eosinophilic esophagitis variants by clinical, histological, and molecular analyses: A cross‐sectional multi‐center study.

Authors :
Greuter, Thomas
Straumann, Alex
Fernandez‐Marrero, Yuniel
Germic, Nina
Hosseini, Aref
Yousefi, Shida
Simon, Dagmar
Collins, Margaret H.
Bussmann, Christian
Chehade, Mirna
Dellon, Evan S.
Furuta, Glenn T.
Gonsalves, Nirmala
Hirano, Ikuo
Moawad, Fouad J.
Biedermann, Luc
Safroneeva, Ekaterina
Schoepfer, Alain M.
Simon, Hans‐Uwe
Source :
Allergy. Aug2022, Vol. 77 Issue 8, p2520-2533. 14p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective: Physicians are increasingly confronted with patients presenting with symptoms of esophageal dysfunction resembling eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), but absence of significant esophageal eosinophilia. The purpose of this study was to characterize and classify this group of EoE variants. Design: Patients from six EoE‐centers with symptoms of esophageal dysfunction, but peak eosinophil counts of <60/mm2 (<15/hpf) in esophageal biopsies and absence of gastro‐esophageal reflux disease (GERD) were included. Clinical, endoscopic, (immuno)‐histological, and molecular features were determined and compared with EoE, GERD, and healthy controls. Results: We included 69 patients with EoE variants. Endoscopic abnormalities were found in 53.6%. We identified three histological subtypes: EoE‐like esophagitis (36/69, 52.2%), lymphocytic esophagitis (14/69, 20.3%), and non‐specific esophagitis (19/69, 27.5%). Immunohistochemistry revealed—in contrast to EoE—no significant increase in inflammatory cell infiltrates compared with GERD and healthy controls, except for lymphocytes in lymphocytic esophagitis. EoE‐typical Th2‐response was absent in all EoE variants. However, considerable structural changes were detected based on histology and protein expression. Using next generation mRNA sequencing, we found the three EoE variants to have distinct molecular fingerprints partially sharing pronounced traits of EoE. Hierarchical sample clustering of RNA sequencing data confirmed the presence of an EoE‐like (characterized by eotaxin‐3 expression), non‐specific, and lymphocytic variant cluster (characterized by CD3 cells and TSLP expression). Conclusion: All EoE variants are clinically and histologically active conditions despite the absence of esophageal eosinophilia. EoE variants appear to be part of a disease spectrum, where classical EoE represents the most common and apparent phenotype. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01054538
Volume :
77
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Allergy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
158391884
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/all.15233