Introduction
Eosinophilic enteritis (EE) consists of an eosinophilic infiltration of segments of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Clinical manifestations depend on the affected segment and intestinal layer: (1) Mucosal (44%), diarrhea, pain, malabsorption; (2) Muscular (12%), strictures, pain, nausea, vomiting, obstruction; (3) sub-serosal (49%), eosinophilic-rich ascites, bloating, pain. There is an association with eosinophilia and atopic disorders. Diagnosis consists of compatible symptoms and exclusion of secondary causes. There are no clear recommendations for treatment; the first line being systemic corticosteroids or budesonide. Surgery is reserved for complications.
Case presentation
An 84-year-old, otherwise healthy male with a remote history of appendectomy, intestinal resection, and right hemicolectomy for an unknown cause, as well as radical prostatectomy and two episodes of intestinal obstruction; presented to the emergency room with a 2-day history of diffuse abdominal pain and distension accompanied by nausea and vomiting. On physical examination, the patient had normal vital signs, abdominal distention, and generalized abdominal pain at palpation, with no rebound tenderness. The laboratory studies showed leukocytosis of 15 and no eosinophilia; total eosinophils of 0.1. He underwent an oral contrast-enhanced CT scan which revealed dilation of the small intestine, areas of stenosis in the distal small intestine with thickening of the intestinal wall, and passage of oral contrast to the colon, compatible with a partial intestinal obstruction (Fig. 1).
Conservative management was initiated, consisting of parenteral rehydration and a nasogastric tube. A colonoscopy that was performed found aphthous ulcers in the stenotic area in the distal ileum (Fig. 2). A film array and stool and direct parasite studies were negative. The patient was started on budesonide 9 mg/d and metronidazole, and 24 h after admission, his partial intestinal obstruction resolved. The final histopathology of the biopsies reported non-granulomatous chronic, ulcerous ileitis, with 57 eosinophils per HPF (with a normal range at this anatomic site of 20 eosinophils per HPF), compatible with a diagnosis of EE (Fig. 3). He is currently treated with budesonide with an adequate response and has begun dose tapering without recurrence.
Discussion
EE is a rare idiopathic GI disease characterized by an intense eosinophilic infiltrate of any segment of the intestinal wall1. EE has a prevalence of 5/100,000 people1-4. It is more common in children under 5 years; however, in adults, it affects females (57%), Caucasian (77%), and between the third and fifth decade (83%)1-5. Other risk factors include higher socioeconomic status and excess weight4,5. It may present with a wide array of symptoms, including abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, bloating, intestinal obstruction, or ascites1 depending on the affected intestinal wall layer.
The clinical manifestations depend on the affected segment of the GI tract and the intestinal layer involved1,3,4,6. The mucosal form, present in 44% of patients, is characterized by vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, failure to thrive, and malabsorption3,6. The muscular form, present in 12% of patients, may present with intestinal strictures, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and intestinal obstruction3,6. The sub-serosal form, present in 49% of patients, is characterized by eosinophilic-rich ascites, bloating, and abdominal pain3,6. An association between EE and eosinophilia (> 70%) and atopic disorders (rhinitis, eczema, asthma, food and drug allergy, dermatitis) has been described3-5 with 64% of patients having a family history of atopic diseases7.
EE primarily affects the stomach and duodenum in up to 40-80% of patients1–3. The diagnosis is established by GI symptoms associated with eosinophilic infiltration and degranulation in at least one intestinal segment, and exclusion of secondary causes of intestinal eosinophilia (parasitosis, intestinal infections, associated drugs, IBD, celiac disease, autoimmune disease, and vasculitis, neoplasia, food hypersensitivity)2-4. It is important to note that eosinophils usually reside in the lamina propia of the intestinal mucosa4,8, except for the esophagus. Their count increases from the duodenum to the cecum and then decreases from proximal to distal in the colon8. Therefore, the cut-off to define an intense pathological eosinophilic infiltration must take into account the localization within the GI tract4,8. Other histological characteristics of EE include eosinophils in the epithelial or muscular layers, degranulation of eosinophils, villous atrophy, crypt hyperplasia/abscesses, and epithelial degenerative and regenerative changes1,4.
Although the gold standard for diagnosis is histological confirmation, EE can be suspected at endoscopy and CT imaging. Endoscopic findings may appear normal, with slight erythema, white specks, focal erosions, ulcers, fold thickening, polyps, nodules, and friability4. The colonoscopy may show mucosal edema, erythema, elevated white lesions, pale granular mucosa, and aphthous ulceration4. On CT scan, there may be evidence of fold thickening, polyps, ulcers, reduced distensibility, strictures, fold thickening, ascites, omental thickening, and lymphadenopathy depending on the intestinal layer involved4.
There are no clear recommendations for treatment1. Approximately 40% of patients will present with spontaneous remission1. There is insufficient evidence to recommend dietary restrictions in the routine management of patients with EE1. The first line of treatment is corticosteroids1,4. Systemic corticosteroids may be used, with a remission rate of 50-90%1. Treatment is started at 0.5-1 mg/kg/day for a few weeks and a tapering period of 6-8 weeks4,5. Budesonide which has low systemic absorption, may also be used at an initial dose of 9 mg/day and slowly tapered for maintenance therapy1,4. Other treatment alternatives depend on the disease's response and severity and include leukotriene inhibitors, mast cell stabilizers, antihistamines H1, azathioprine, mesalazine, and biological agents1,4. Surgery is reserved for intestinal complications, such as strictures or perforation, and consists of a segmental resection with or without primary anastomosis4. As in this patient, even in the setting of an acute abdomen, symptoms may respond to conservative treatment with immunosuppression4.