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IgG4-related Lymphadenopathy

Jacob R. Bledsoe, Judith A. Ferry, Azfar Neyaz, Leonardo Boiocchi, Cara Strock, Karen Dresser, Lawrence Zukerberg, Vikram Deshpande

2020The American Journal of Surgical Pathology28 citationsDOI

Abstract

Lymphadenopathy is common in patients with immunoglobulin G4-related disease (IgG4-RD). However, the described histopathologic features of IgG4-related lymphadenopathy have been shown to be largely nonspecific. In an attempt to identify features specific for nodal IgG4-RD we examined the histopathologic features of lymph nodes from 41 patients with established IgG4-RD, with comparison to 60 lymph nodes from patients without known or subsequent development of IgG4-RD. An increase in immunoglobulin (Ig) G4-positive plasma cells >100/HPF and IgG4/IgG ratio >40% was identified in 51% of IgG4-RD cases and 20% of control cases. Localization of increased IgG4-positive plasma cells and IgG4/IgG ratio to extrafollicular zones was highly associated with IgG4-RD, particularly when identified in regions of nodal fibrosis (P<0.0001; specificity: 98.3%), or in the context of marked interfollicular expansion (P=0.022; specificity: 100%). Other features characteristic of IgG4-RD included frequent eosinophils associated with IgG4-positive plasma cells, phlebitis (P=0.06), and perifollicular granulomas (P=0.16). The presence of an isolated increase in intrafollicular IgG4-positive plasma cells and IgG4/IgG ratio was more frequently present in control cases than IgG4-RD (P<0.0001). This study confirms that increased IgG4-positive plasma cells and IgG4/IgG ratio are neither sensitive nor specific for the diagnosis of IgG4-related lymphadenopathy, and most described morphologic patterns are nonspecific. In contrast, nodal involvement by IgG4-rich fibrosis akin to extranodal IgG4-RD or diffuse interfollicular expansion by IgG4-positive plasma cells are highly specific features of true IgG4-related lymphadenopathy. Our findings provide for a clinically meaningful approach to the evaluation of lymph nodes that will assist pathologists in distinguishing IgG4-related lymphadenopathy from its mimics.

Topics & Concepts

IgG4-related diseasePathologyLymphAntibodyFibrosisMedicineContext (archaeology)ImmunologyBiologyPaleontologyIgG4-Related and Inflammatory DiseasesGastrointestinal disorders and treatmentsSoft tissue tumor case studies
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