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Intestinal ultrasound for intestinal Behçet disease reflects endoscopic activity and histopathological findings

Authors :
Katsuki Yaguchi
Reiko Kunisaki
Sho Sato
Kaori Hirai
Misato Izumi
Yoshimi Fukuno
Mami Tanaka
Mai Okazaki
Rongrong Wu
Yurika Nishikawa
Yusuke Matsune
Shunsuke Shibui
Yoshinori Nakamori
Masafumi Nishio
Mao Matsubayashi
Tsuyoshi Ogashiwa
Ayako Fujii
Kenichiro Toritani
Hideaki Kimura
Eita Kumagai
Yukiko Sasahara
Yoshiaki Inayama
Satoshi Fujii
Toshiaki Ebina
Kazushi Numata
Shin Maeda
Source :
Intestinal Research, Vol 22, Iss 3, Pp 297-309 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Korean Association for the Study of Intestinal Diseases, 2024.

Abstract

Background/Aims Intestinal Behçet disease is typically associated with ileocecal punched-out ulcers and significant morbidity and mortality. Intestinal ultrasound is a noninvasive imaging technique for disease monitoring. However, no previous reports have compared intestinal ultrasound with endoscopic ulcer activity or histopathological findings for intestinal Behçet disease. We evaluated the usefulness of intestinal ultrasound for assessing the activity of ileocecal ulcers in intestinal Behçet disease. Methods We retrospectively compared intestinal ultrasound findings with 73 corresponding endoscopic images and 6 resected specimens. The intestinal ultrasound findings were assessed for 7 parameters (bowel wall thickness, vascularity [evaluated using the modified Limberg score with color Doppler], bowel wall stratification, white-plaque sign [strong hyperechogenic lines or spots], mesenteric lymphadenopathy, extramural phlegmons, and fistulas), and endoscopic ulcer activity was classified into active, healing, and scar stages. Histopathological findings were evaluated by consensus among experienced pathologists. Results Bowel wall thickness (P< 0.001), vascularity (P< 0.001), loss of bowel wall stratification (P= 0.015), and white-plague sign (P= 0.013) were significantly exacerbated in the endoscopic active ulcer stage. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis revealed that a bowel wall thickness of > 5.5 mm (sensitivity 89.7%, specificity 85.3%) was potentially useful for detecting active lesions. When compared with histopathological findings, an increase in bowel wall thickness reflected the ulcer marginal ridge, and the white-plaque sign reflected the ulcer bottom. Conclusions Intestinal ultrasound is useful for monitoring intestinal ulcer activity in intestinal Behçet disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15989100 and 22881956
Volume :
22
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Intestinal Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.194bb75a92464eb0303ecbdfc5300c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5217/ir.2023.00129