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Cronkhite-Canada syndrome: a retrospective analysis of four cases at a single medical center

Authors :
Xing Yu
Chengdang Wang
Mi Wang
Yinchen Wu
Linlin Zhang
Qinyu Yang
Long Chen
Source :
Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology. 57:958-964
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2022.

Abstract

Cronkhite-Canada syndrome (CCS) is a rare disease that is characterized by multiple gastrointestinal polyps and ectodermal abnormalities. This study aimed to improve the understanding of CCS by presenting our patient data.Clinical features, treatment, and outcomes of four CCS patients at a single medical center were retrospectively analyzed.The age of the patients ranged from 32 to 61 years (mean: 49.5 years), including three men and one woman. All the patients presented with gastrointestinal symptoms, ectodermal abnormalities, and multiple gastrointestinal polyps. Two patients showed abnormal immune indices. Three patients underwent magnetic resonance enterography, and the typical manifestations of small intestine involvement were diffuse wall thickening, high signal intensity on diffusion-weighted imaging, obvious enhancement, and multiple small nodular enhancements of the small intestine. The main histological manifestations were chronic inflammation and hyperplastic, adenomatoid, and hamartomatoid polyps. Eosinophilic infiltration was observed in two patients. One patient had rectal adenocarcinoma at the time of diagnosis. All the four patients received prednisone at a dose of 0.75-1 mg/kg/day, and had their gastrointestinal symptoms gradually resolved (including two with ectodermal abnormality and endoscopic remission). Two patients are currently receiving low-dose prednisone (2.5-5 mg/day) with no recurrence after a 1.5- and 6-year follow-up periods, respectively.Magnetic resonance enterography has the potential to evaluate small-intestinal lesions in CCSs. Long-term therapy with low doses of prednisone may be beneficial in maintaining remission.

Details

ISSN :
15027708 and 00365521
Volume :
57
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c77ac11b312e906f32e814f7fca43b67