We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

LabMedica

Download Mobile App
Recent News Expo Medica 2024 Clinical Chem. Molecular Diagnostics Hematology Immunology Microbiology Pathology Technology Industry Focus

Biopsies May Overlook Esophagus Disease

By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 25 Sep 2012
An existing diagnostic method may overlook an elusive digestive disorder that causes swelling in the esophagus and painful swallowing.

The location and density of eosinophils, which regulate allergy mechanisms in the immune system suggest the disease eosinophilic esophagitis, or EoE, may be under- or misdiagnosed in patients using the current method, which is to take tissue samples as biopsies with an endoscope.

Medical scientists at the University of Utah (Salt Lake City, UT, USA) showed that even a patient with known EoE would require more than 31 random tissue samples, or biopsies, from an area in the esophagus with low eosinophil density to reliably diagnose EoE. Currently, if a patient is suspected of having EoE, five to 12 biopsies are collected along the esophagus using an endoscope. If more than 15 eosinophils turn up in any one of these samples, a diagnosis of EoE is made.

To generate a map of eosinophil distribution in the esophagus the lead investigator examined each of 17 tissue sections taken at intervals every 0.32-0.51 cm along the esophagus of a known adult EoE patient. A typical adult esophagus is 25.4 cm long. Tissue was imaged with an Olympus microscope (Olympus, Center Valley, PA, USA) at ×400 magnification. The eosinophil count for each site was performed manually, one high-powered field (hpf) at a time, around the entire luminal perimeter. The number of sites containing a diagnostic level of eosinophils, either 15 eosinophils/hpf or 20 eosinophils/hpf was determined for each of the 17 circumferential sections.

A statistical simulation technique was used to determine whether randomly sampling tissue would result in a positive diagnosis of EoE based on eosinophil density. Leonard F. Pease, PhD, a senior author of the study said, "Our analysis shows that with current diagnostic conventions, you are only going to catch the patients with medium-to-high eosinophil densities, which means we may be misdiagnosing patients as much as one out of every five times. Given this data, clearly endoscopy is not sufficient for a disease this patchy."

The team is investigating technologies for labeling and detecting proteins shed by eosinophils in the esophagus, which would help detect EoE at an earlier stage. They have also filed a patent to use radiolabeled antibodies to map eosinophils throughout the entire esophagus, a new technique that would be evaluated with a clinical trial. The study was published in the September 2012 issue of the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.

Related Links:

University of Utah
Olympus



Gold Member
Hematology Analyzer
Swelab Lumi
Automated Blood Typing System
IH-500 NEXT
New
Thyroxine ELISA
T4 ELISA
New
Newborn Screening Test
NeoMass AAAC 3.0

Latest Pathology News

AI Method Measures Cancer Severity Using Pathology Reports

New Microscopy Method Enables Detailed Whole Brain 3D RNA Analysis

AI Model Identifies Signs of Disease Faster and More Accurately Than Humans