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DOI: 10.1055/s-2005-861049
Significance of Colonoscopy in Patients with Intestinal Graft-Versus-Host Disease after Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
Publication History
                     Submitted 4 July 2004
                     
                     Accepted after Revision 3 November 2004
                     
Publication Date:
12 April 2005 (online)

         Background and Study Aims: Patients with intestinal graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) are generally in poor clinical
         condition. In this study we aimed to establish the clinical significance of endoscopic
         diagnosis of this condition, observing only the distal section of the large intestine.
         Patients and Methods: Endoscopic and pathological findings at colonoscopy were evaluated retrospectively
         in 12 patients who were diagnosed with intestinal GVHD after undergoing hematopoietic
         stem cell transplantation.
         Results: The main mucosal changes observed at endoscopy were granular change, edema, “spotty
         redness”, and sloughing. These were clearly displayed after enhancement with Indigo
         carmine staining, and with insertion of the colonoscope only as far as the distal
         section of the large intestine. A histological diagnosis of intestinal GVHD was made
         in 50 % of the patients, whose intestinal epithelium specimens showed numerous apoptotic
         bodies. It was possible to perform total colonoscopy in two patients who were in relatively
         good condition clinically, but there were no remarkable differences in the endoscopic
         findings throughout the large intestine, from the terminal ileum to the rectum. In
         terms of clinical outcomes of the 12 patients, their prognosis was poor in that they
         all either went on to suffer from chronic GVHD or died.
         Conclusions: Endoscopic and histological findings on distal colonoscopy are clinically significant
         in the diagnosis of intestinal GVHD, and limiting this examination to the distal section
         of the large intestine avoids causing further clinical deterioration in patients who
         are already in very poor general condition and the possibility of causing endoscopy-related
         complications.
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S. Oomori, M. D.
         Division of Gastroenterology, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine · 
         
         1-1 Seiryo-machi · Aoba-ku · Sendai 980-8574 · Japan
         
         Fax: +81-22-717-7177 · 
         
         Email: goodluck-ohmori@mta.biglobe.ne.jp
         
         
 
     
      
    