Clinicopathological features of immunoglobulin G4-related pleural lesions and diagnostic utility of pleural effusion cytology
- PMID: 30290034
- DOI: 10.1111/cyt.12641
Clinicopathological features of immunoglobulin G4-related pleural lesions and diagnostic utility of pleural effusion cytology
Abstract
Objective: Immunoglobulin (Ig)G4-related disease is a recently described systemic immune-mediated fibro-inflammatory disease that frequently occurs in tumorous form. Herein, we elucidated the clinicopathological and cytological characteristics of IgG4-related pleural lesions (PLs).
Patients and methods: Among 22 patients with fibro-inflammatory PLs of idiopathic aetiology, eight cases were diagnosed as IgG4-PL and the remaining 14 as non-IgG4-PL according to comprehensive diagnostic criteria for IgG4-related disease. Cell block examination of pleural effusion (CBPE) was performed in five patients with IgG4-PL and in six with non-IgG4-PL. Both groups were compared in terms of clinical presentation, laboratory data, histopathological features of resected pleura, and cytological features of pleural effusion (PE).
Results: PE was the most common (six patients, 75%) clinical presentation of IgG4-PL. IgG4-PL comparatively showed significantly more frequent concomitant allergic disease (P = .021), higher serum IgE levels (P = .012), higher adenosine deaminase levels in pleural fluid (P = .005), and rare spontaneous recovery without treatment (P = .046). The IgG4-PL group was histologically characterised by thicker fibrous pleura, storiform fibrosis, and infiltration of regulatory T cells, eosinophils and basophils. Using CBPE, IgG4-PL was cytologically distinct with numerous IgG4+ cells and eosinophils. The cytology of CBPE positively correlated with the histology of pleural tissue in the number of IgG4+ cells and eosinophils (R = .769 and .803, respectively).
Conclusion: IgG4-PL frequently presents with PE and is histologically and cytologically characterised by abundant infiltration of IgG4+ cells and eosinophils. We believe that CBPE with immunohistochemistry/special staining could assist in the auxiliary diagnosis of IgG4-PL.
Keywords: cell block examination; chronic pleuritis; immunoglobulin G4-related disease; immunoglobulin G4-related pleural lesion; pleural effusion.
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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