Back to Search Start Over

Significance of the epithelioid granuloma in biopsies of Crohn's colitis

Authors :
Amnon Sonnenberg
Giovanni Lujan
Robert M. Genta
Cristian Robiou
Kevin Turner
Source :
Inflammatory bowel diseases. 20(12)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background: The relevance of granulomas in biopsy specimens from patients with Crohn’s disease is largely unknown. Most previous studies have been performed on small samples and have produced conflicting results. This study was designed to compare the demographic, clinical, and histopathologic characteristics of a large cohort of documented patients with Crohn’s disease with and without epithelioid granulomas. Methods: Data of all patients with Crohn’s disease were extracted from a computerized database of 1.3 million subjects who underwent colonoscopy and had their biopsy specimens diagnosed by a single group of gastrointestinal pathologists. The influence of age, gender, patient symptoms, and histopathologic finding on the presence of granuloma was analyzed. Results: There were 10,456 patients with Crohn’s disease: 952 (9%) patients harbored granulomas (cases) and 9504 (91%) patients (controls) had none. Cases were significantly younger than controls: 42.4 6 17.9 versus 48.0 6 16.4 years (P , 0.0001). Cases presented with more symptoms than controls (odds ratio, 95% confidence interval): diarrhea (2.29, 2.28–2.31), anemia (2.06, 2.02–2.10), vomiting (2.13, 2.07–2.19), abdominal pain (1.75, 1.72– 1.78), hematochezia (1.97, 1.94–2.00), and weight loss (3.94, 3.93–3.94). In a multivariate logistic regression analysis, younger age, presence of chronic active colitis, and symptoms of weight loss remained independent statistically significant predictors for the presence of granulomas. Conclusions: In colonic biopsies from patients with Crohn’s disease, granulomas constitute a rare finding. Presence of granulomas is associated with younger patient age, more severe histopathologic expression of the underlying disease, and more clinical symptoms. (Inflamm Bowel Dis 2014;0:1–5)

Details

ISSN :
15364844
Volume :
20
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Inflammatory bowel diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2d0d336bfb464b5dd0baf2a67f904a70