Limitations of the criteria used to diagnose histologic endometritis in epidemiologic pelvic inflammatory disease research |
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Authors: | Vicetti Miguel Rodolfo D Chivukula Mamatha Krishnamurti Uma Amortegui Antonio J Kant Jeffrey A Sweet Richard L Wiesenfeld Harold C Phillips Jaclyn M Cherpes Thomas L |
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Affiliation: | a University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine (UPSOM), Department of Pediatrics, United States b UPSOM, Department of Pathology, Magee Womens Hospital, United States c Department of Pathology, Western Pennsylvania Hospital, United States d UPSOM, Department of Pathology, United States e University of California-Davis Health System, United States f UPSOM, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, United States |
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Abstract: | While endometrial neutrophils and plasma cells are criteria used to diagnose histologic endometritis in epidemiologic pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) research, plasma cell misidentification and nonspecificity may limit the accuracy of these criteria. Herein, we examined: (1) the identification of endometrial plasma cells with conventional methyl green pyronin-based methodology versus plasma cell-specific (CD138) immunostaining, (2) the prevalence of endometrial plasma cells among women at low risk for PID, and (3) endometrial leukocyte subpopulations among women diagnosed with acute or chronic histologic endometritis by conventional criteria. We observed an absence of CD138+ cells in 25% of endometrial biopsies in which plasma cells had been identified by conventional methodology, while additional immunohistochemical analyses revealed indistinguishable inflammatory infiltrates among women diagnosed with acute or chronic endometritis by conventional criteria. Among women considered at lower risk for PID development, flow cytometric analyses detected plasma cells in 30% of endometrial biopsy specimens, suggesting that these cells, even when accurately identified, only nonspecifically identify upper genital tract inflammatory processes. Combined, our findings underscore the limitations of the criteria used to diagnose histologic endometritis in PID-related research and suggest that satisfactory understanding of PID pathogenesis, treatment, and prevention is hindered by continued use of these criteria. |
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Keywords: | Histologic endometritis Plasma cell Syndecan-1 Pelvic inflammatory disease |
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