Τετάρτη 9 Οκτωβρίου 2019

Nasal and Lacrimal Sac Histopathology in Patients With Granulomatous Polyangiitis Undergoing Lacrimal Drainage Surgery

Nasal and Lacrimal Sac Histopathology in Patients With Granulomatous Polyangiitis Undergoing Lacrimal Drainage Surgery: Purpose:

To examine histological changes within nasal and lacrimal sac mucosa harvested from patients with granulomatous polyangiitis (GPA) who required lacrimal drainage surgery. As these patients were considered quiescent on clinical and serological grounds, particular attention was paid to the presence of active vasculitis.

Design:

Retrospective noncomparative case series.

Participants:

Patients with GPA who had open lacrimal drainage surgery under the care of a single surgeon between 1991 and 2017. All patients had paired biopsies of both nasal and ipsilateral lacrimal sac mucosa.

Methods:

Biopsies of the nasal and lacrimal sac mucosa, taken from the operative site during either primary or revisional open dacryocystorhinostomy, were reported by experienced ophthalmic histopathologists. Outcome measures were the surgical appearance of the tissues and the proportion of each tissue showing histological evidence of active vasculitis, chronic inflammation with or without fibrosis, marked fibrosis without inflammation, or acute-on-chronic inflammatory changes.

Results:

Paired tissues were available from 47 patients (25 females; 53%) who had undergone 64 procedures (57 primary, 7 revisional). All patients had systemic disease, this being known prior to surgery in 43 patients (with 41/43 on long-established systemic immunosuppression) and suspected clinically after the initial lacrimal examination in 4/47. Most lacrimal sacs and nasal spaces showed a variety of abnormalities, this commonly being extensive scarring. Despite most patients being considered to have inactive systemic GPA, active vasculitis was evident in 23/64 (36%) lacrimal sac biopsies and 32/64 (50%) nasal mucosal biopsies—suggesting that serological markers may not be reliable guide to disease activity where disease is of limited volume (as, for example, with limited sino-nasal disease). Chronic lymphocytic inflammation was present in a further 35/64 (55%) sacs—associated with marked fibrosis in 5—and a further 25/64 (41%) nasal biopsies (with fibrosis in 2).

Conclusions:

The lacrimal sac and nasal space are highly abnormal in most patients with GPA undergoing lacrimal drainage surgery. Despite having clinically and serologically inactive disease on established systemic immunotherapy, histological examination often shows unrecognized active vasculitis, which might indicate inadequate systemic immunosuppression for the underlying condition.

Accepted for publication July 29, 2019.

Professor Geoffrey Rose receives some funding from the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and UCL Institute of Ophthalmology.

The authors have no financial or conflicts of interest to disclose.

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Geoffrey E. Rose, D.Sc., F.R.C.Ophth., Adnexal Service, Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, City Road, London EC1V 2PD, United Kingdom. E-mail: geoff.rose1@nhs.net

© 2019 by The American Society of Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Inc., All rights reserved.

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