Matsubayashi H, Kakushima N, Takizawa K, Tanaka M, Imai K, Hotta K, Ono H. Diagnosis of autoimmune pancreatitis. World J Gastroenterol 2014; 20(44): 16559-16569 [PMID: 25469024 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i44.16559]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Hiroyuki Matsubayashi, MD, PhD, Chief of Pancreatobiliary Endoscopy, Division of Endoscopy, Shizuoka Cancer Center, 1007, Shimonagakubo, Nagaizumi, Suntogun, Shizuoka 411-8777, Japan. h.matsubayashi@scchr.jp
Research Domain of This Article
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Article-Type of This Article
Topic Highlight
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Pathological examination shows characteristic features of sclerosing cholangitis, sclerosing dacryoadenitis sialoadenitis or/retroperitoneal fibrosis
<Option> Effectiveness of steroid therapy
A specialized facility may include in its diagnosis the effectiveness of steroid therapy, once pancreatic or bile duct cancers have been ruled out. When it is difficult to differentiate from malignant conditions, it is desirable to perform cytological examination using an endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA). Facile therapeutic diagnosis by steroids should be avoided unless the possibility of malignant tumor has been ruled out by pathological diagnosis.
B: Diagnosis
I: Definite diagnosis
(1) Diffuse type
Ia + III/IVb/V (a/b)
(2) Segmental/focal type
Ib + II + two or more of < III/IVb/V (a/b) >
or
Ib + II + < III/IVb/V (a/b) > + Option
(3) Definite diagnosis by histopathological study
IVa
II: Probable diagnosis
Segmental/focal type: Ib + II + < III/IVb/V(a/b) >
Rapid ( ≤ 2 wk) radiologically demonstrable resolution or marked improvement in manifestations
Table 4 Diagnosis of autoimmune pancreatitis-not otherwise specified using international consensus diagnostic criteria[25]
Diagnosis
Collateral evidence (case with only D1/2)
AIP-not otherwise specified
D1/2 + Rt
Table 5 Characteristics of clinicopathological findings in type 1 and type 2 autoimmune pancreatitis
Type 1 AIP
Type 2 AIP
Geographical distributuion
Asia > United States, Europe
Europe > United States > Asia
Age at presentation
60-70 s
40-50 s
Gender
Male >> Female
Male = Female
Symptoms
Jaundice, Abdominal pain
Jaundice, Abdominal pain
Serology
IgG4, IgG, Autoantibodies
Usually negative
Pancreatic images
Enlarged (focal, diffuse)
Enlarged (focal, diffuse)
Pancreatic histology
LPSP
IDCP with GEL
Extrapancreatic lesions
Sclerosing cholangitis, sialoadenitis, retroperitoneal fibrosis, interstitional nephritis, etc.
Inflammatory bowel disease
Steroid response
Excellent
Excellent
Relapse
High rate
Rare
Table 6 Extrapancreatic lesions associated with type 1 autoimmune pancreatitis
Close association
Possible association
Lachrymal gland inflammation
Hypophysitis
Sialoadenitis
Autoimmune neurosensory hearing loss
Hilar lymphadenopathy
Uveitis
Interstitial pneumonitis
Chronic thyroiditis
Sclerosing cholangitis
Pseudotumor (breast, lung, liver)
Retroperitoneal fibrosis
Gastric ulcer
Tubulointestinal nephritis
Swelling of Papilla of Vater
IgG4 hepatopathy
Periaortitis
Prostatitis
Schonlein-Henoch purpura
Autoimmune thrombocytopenia
Citation: Matsubayashi H, Kakushima N, Takizawa K, Tanaka M, Imai K, Hotta K, Ono H. Diagnosis of autoimmune pancreatitis. World J Gastroenterol 2014; 20(44): 16559-16569