Abstract: | The aim of the present study was to evaluate the correspondence of the classification of non-antral endocrine cell growths proposed by Solcia and co-workers with clinical features and non-endocrine mucosal changes. For this purpose, 94 cases of newly diagnosed atrophic body gastritis were investigated using endoscopic biopsies and compared with 18 control subjects. The patients were subdivided into the following four groups according to the most severe pattern of endocrine cell proliferation found in the body mucosa, as shown by chromogranin A immunostaining: group 1, normal pattern (7 cases, 7·5 per cent); group 2, simple hyperplasia (6 cases, 6·5 per cent); group 3, linear hyperplasia (24 cases, 25·8 per cent); group 4; micronodular hyperplasia (56 cases, 60·2 per cent). Adenomatoid hyperplasia was found in only one case, thus precluding further analysis. Patients in groups 1 and 2 had lower acid secretion, higher gastrin level, and higher mean scores in all histopathological variables of chronic gastritis considered by the Sydney system when compared with controls, but did not differ among them in any parameter investigated. When compared with groups 1 and 2, patients of groups 3 and 4 showed higher values of circulating gastrin, higher scores of glandular atrophy, and lower values of acid secretion and of mononuclear and neutrophil inflammatory cell infiltration. Moreover, group 4 patients differed significantly from those of group 3 in their higher gastrin levels and atrophy scores, and lower scores of neutrophil cell infiltration. On the basis of these results, it is proposed that for practical purposes the normal and the simple hyperplasia patterns may be incorporated into a single group. It is concluded that this classification in its simplified form, based on a qualitative histological approach, shows clinical relevance without the need to perform expensive, time-consuming morphometric evaluations. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |