Main pancreatic duct (MPD)-narrowed
chronic pancreatitis (CP) may be an autoimmune abnormality. It also has been called
autoimmune pancreatitis and sclerosing
pancreatitis. It is unclear whether cases with focal pancreatographic changes are part of the same clinical entity as cases with diffuse MPD changes.
AIM AND METHODOLOGY: We reviewed seven cases of
chronic pancreatitis (CP) with focal narrowing of the main pancreatic duct (MPD), evidenced by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), and swelling of one or two segments of the pancreas, evidenced by ultrasonography (US) /computed tomography (CT), and indicated the clinicopathologic features of focal-type MPD-narrowed CP.
RESULTS: The patient group comprised six men and one woman, and their age range was 28-75 years, with a mean of 63.7 years. Affected sites were in the head in two patients, the body in one patient, the tail in one patient, and the body and tail in three patients; ERP showed narrowing in six patients and obstruction in one.
Stricture of the lower portion of the common bile duct (CBD) that caused
obstructive jaundice was shown by ERC in two cases in which the pancreas head was affected. In all six patients, a dynamic study by CT or MRI homogeneously showed delayed enhancement of involved segments of the pancreas. Serum levels of pancreatic
enzyme were elevated in five patients, but only one subject had
pancreatitis-like epigastric
pain. Serological evidence suggestive of autoimmune abnormality was detected in only three patients with
hypergammaglobulinemia (> or =2.0 g/dL) or positive titers of
antinuclear antibody (ANA; > or =80). Histological assessment was available for five patients, who characteristically had dense lymphocytic or plasmocytic infiltration with severe
fibrosis that caused
luminal narrowing. The clinical, serologic, and histologic findings as described above were comparable to those for 12 CP patients with diffuse narrowing of the MPD, diagnosed during the same period. Surgical resection was performed in 5 patients, in 2 of whom a similar inflammatory process recurred in the remnant head of the pancreas, whereas
pancreatitis no longer developed in the other 3 patients. One patient was initially treated with
steroids, with clinical remission, although there was neither
hypergammaglobulinemia nor positive ANA.
CONCLUSION: These results indicate that CP with focal narrowing of the MPD is part of the same clinical spectrum as CP with diffuse narrowing of the MPD, and whether the distribution is diffuse or focal seems to be related to the stage or the extent of the disease. It is therefore important to recognize the possible existence of this focal variant to avoid unnecessary surgery.