Assessment of Histopathologic Changes in the Colonic Biopsy in Acute Graft-Versus-Host Disease

Abstract
The authors reviewed 78 colonic biopsies from 63 patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation (BMT), 56 allogeneic and 7 autologous, to assess different morphologic changes related with intestinal acute graft-versus-host disease (A-GVHD). Only five biopsies were done before the 20th day after BMT. The authors studied the presence of ulcers and atrophy in the mucosa, the nuclear atypia, and inflammatory infiltrate in the surface epithelium, and the architectural abnormalities, as well as dilation of the glands, and the presence of crypt abscesses. The authors explored the glandular epithelium for apoptosis and intraepithelial lymphocytes. They examined the lamina propria for inflammatory infiltrate, especially for so-called “focal periglandular infiltrate (FPGI),” edema, fibrosis, increase of capillary vessels and presence of muciphages and clusters of enterochromaffin cells. Cases were grouped according to clinical symptoms and histologic diagnosis of A-GVHD in skin or liver. Group A had 15 asymptomatic cases (control). Group B had 20 cases from asymptomatic patients with a histologically proven A-GVHD. Group C had 43 cases with gastrointestinal symptoms and histologically proven A-GVHD. Then, the relative frequency of every histologic feature previously described were compared in the different groups by means of an univariate analysis. Apoptosis of the glandular epithelium was found in 48 cases, two of them in patients carrying an auto-BMT. Focal periglandular infiltrate was found in 11 cases that was associated with apoptosis (P < .03, Fisher’s exact test). In this series, the presence of FPGI was linked with finding apoptosis in a given specimen with a probability of 91%. Glandular architectural changes and dilation were also more frequent in group C than in groups A and B when compared in the univariate analysis.