Postinfantile giant cell hepatitis is a severe form of hepatitis that has several different potential etiologies, 2 of which were present in this patient: androgenic supplements and infection. This case highlights syphilis as an unusual but treatable cause of giant cell hepatitis. Testing for syphilis should be considered in any persistent liver injury.
By using qPCR, this study demonstrated an association between ADV and AA higher than has been previously reported: ADV was detected in 14% of AA cases in this series versus in only 0.23% of AA cases in previous studies (p < 0.01). There was no evidence of CMV, EBV, or enterovirus association with AA in this study. Comparison of qPCR to IHC shows that histologic analysis may overlook evidence of ADV in appendiceal tissue: qPCR is significantly more sensitive than light microscopy and IHC for detecting ADV in this setting. Because ADV 4 was detected in 81% of those with positive qPCR, the recently licensed live oral ADV vaccine might be useful for primary prevention against AA. Prospective studies evaluating young adults presenting with AA for evidence of infection with ADV are needed to determine if a causal relationship exists.
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains deadly despite advances in systemic therapies and surgical techniques. While there is increasing utilization of immune therapies across diverse cancer types, PDAC remains generally resistant to these treatments. We report a case of locally advanced PDAC treated with preoperative radiation and anti-PD-1 immunotherapy guided by preoperative PD-L1 tumor analysis. After 4 months of preoperative therapy, the patient was submitted to resection, demonstrating a near-complete pathologic response on final tumor analysis. We will discuss the relevant literature and current state of immunotherapeutics for PDAC.
Thymomas are rare neoplasms of the thymus and are often associated with immune-mediated paraneoplastic syndromes, most commonly, myasthenia gravis. The same underlying mechanism can produce antibodies to other self-antigens in various organ systems. Autoimmune hepatitis is a rare complication of thymoma. We present a 35-year-old healthy male, initially thought to have drug-induced liver injury, who was subsequently diagnosed with thymoma-induced autoimmune hepatitis, a rare syndrome of which only two previous cases have been reported.
Endoscopic ampullary biopsies showing increased immunoglobulin (Ig) G4+ plasma cells have been reported as an alternative to pancreatic biopsy in diagnosing autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP). This study assessed whether increased IgG4+ cells can be seen outside the context of AIP. Fifty-four cases (45 duodenal or ampullary biopsies, 9 ampullae from pancreatic resections) were selected, and all specimens were immunostained for IgG4 and IgG. Duodenal or ampullary biopsies containing normal duodenal mucosa (n = 6) and increased intraepithelial lymphocytes without villous blunting (n = 7) were negative for IgG4. Increased IgG4+ cells (>10 per high-power field) were found in 7 cases of 18 serologically confirmed celiac disease patients and in 3 of 14 patients with duodenitis or gastric heterotopias. Two of 6 ampullae from patients with pancreatic cancer showed increased IgG4+ cells. In summary, 12 of 51 patients without AIP had duodenal biopsies or ampullae showing increased IgG4+ plasma cells. The finding of increased IgG4+ cells in duodenal biopsies is not specific for AIP without the correct clinical context.
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