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Abstract
IgG4-related disease is a newly recognized fibro-inflammatory condition characterized
by several features: a tendency to form tumefactive lesions in multiple sites; a characteristic
histopathological appearance; and-often but not always-elevated serum IgG4 concentrations.
An international symposium on IgG4-related disease was held in Boston, MA, on 4-7
October 2011. The organizing committee comprising 35 IgG4-related disease experts
from Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, Holland, Canada,
and the United States, including the clinicians, pathologists, radiologists, and basic
scientists. This group represents broad subspecialty expertise in pathology, rheumatology,
gastroenterology, allergy, immunology, nephrology, pulmonary medicine, oncology, ophthalmology,
and surgery. The histopathology of IgG4-related disease was a specific focus of the
international symposium. The primary purpose of this statement is to provide practicing
pathologists with a set of guidelines for the diagnosis of IgG4-related disease. The
diagnosis of IgG4-related disease rests on the combined presence of the characteristic
histopathological appearance and increased numbers of IgG4⁺ plasma cells. The critical
histopathological features are a dense lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate, a storiform pattern
of fibrosis, and obliterative phlebitis. We propose a terminology scheme for the diagnosis
of IgG4-related disease that is based primarily on the morphological appearance on
biopsy. Tissue IgG4 counts and IgG4:IgG ratios are secondary in importance. The guidelines
proposed in this statement do not supplant careful clinicopathological correlation
and sound clinical judgment. As the spectrum of this disease continues to expand,
we advocate the use of strict criteria for accepting newly proposed entities or sites
as components of the IgG4-related disease spectrum.
Autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP) is occasionally associated with other autoimmune diseases. To investigate the pathophysiology of AIP, we immunohistochemically examined the pancreas and other organs in eight patients with AIP, and in controls, using anti-CD4-T and CD8-T cell subsets, as well as IgG4 antibodies. In AIP patients, severe or moderate infiltration of IgG4-positive plasma cells associated with CD4- or CD8-positive T lymphocytes was detected in the peripancreatic tissue (6/6), bile duct (8/8), gallbladder (8/8), portal area of the liver (3/3), gastric mucosa (5/7), colonic mucosa (2/2), salivary glands (1/2), lymph nodes (6/6), and bone marrow (2/2), as well as in the pancreas (8/8). There were few IgG4-positive plasma cells at the same sites in controls. These results suggest that AIP is not simply pancreatitis but that it is a pancreatic lesion involved in IgG4-related systemic disease with extensive organ involvement. We propose a new clinicopathological entity, of a systemic IgG4-related autoimmune disease in which AIP and its associated diseases might be involved. Autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP) is occasionally associated with other autoimmune diseases.
Despite its well-known association with IgE-mediated allergy, IgG4 antibodies still have several poorly understood characteristics. IgG4 is a very dynamic antibody: the antibody is involved in a continuous process of half-molecules (i.e. a heavy and attached light-chain) exchange. This process, also referred to as 'Fab-arm exchange', results usually in asymmetric antibodies with two different antigen-combining sites. While these antibodies are hetero- bivalent, they will behave as monovalent antibodies in most situations. Another aspect of IgG4, still poorly understood, is its tendency to mimic IgG rheumatoid factor (RF) activity by interacting with IgG on a solid support. In contrast to conventional RF, which binds via its variable domains, the activity of IgG4 is located in its constant domains. This is potentially a source of false positives in IgG4 antibody assay results. Because regulation of IgG4 production is dependent on help by T-helper type 2 (Th2) cells, the IgG4 response is largely restricted to non-microbial antigens. This Th2-dependency associates the IgG4 and IgE responses. Another typical feature in the immune regulation of IgG4 is its tendency to appear only after prolonged immunization. In the context of IgE-mediated allergy, the appearance of IgG4 antibodies is usually associated with a decrease in symptoms. This is likely to be due, at least in part, to an allergen-blocking effect at the mast cell level and/or at the level of the antigen-presenting cell (preventing IgE-facilitated activation of T cells). In addition, the favourable association reflects the enhanced production of IL-10 and other anti-inflammatory cytokines, which drive the production of IgG4. While in general, IgG4 is being associated with non-activating characteristics, in some situations IgG4 antibodies have an association with pathology. Two striking examples are pemphigoid diseases and sclerosing diseases such as autoimmune pancreatitis. The mechanistic basis for the association of IgG4 with these diseases is still enigmatic. However, the association with sclerosing diseases may reflect an excessive production of anti-inflammatory cytokines triggering an overwhelming expansion of IgG4-producing plasma cells. The bottom line for allergy diagnosis: IgG4 by itself is unlikely to be a cause of allergic symptoms. In general, the presence of allergen-specific IgG4 indicates that anti-inflammatory, tolerance-inducing mechanisms have been activated. The existence of the IgG4 subclass, its up-regulation by anti-inflammatory factors and its own anti-inflammatory characteristics may help the immune system to dampen inappropriate inflammatory reactions.
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