Objective: Hirschsprung's disease (HSCR) is a congenital intestinal neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by the absence of enteric ganglion cells in the distal colon. Although Hirschsprung-associated enterocolitis (HAEC) is the most frequent life-threatening complication in HSCR, to date reliable biomarkers predicting the likelihood of HAEC are yet to be established. We established a three-center retrospective study including 104 HSCR patients surgically treated between 1998 and 2019.
Materials and methods: Patient-derived cryopreserved or paraffin-preserved colonic tissue at surgery was analyzed via βIII-tubulin immunohistochemistry. We subsequently determined extrinsic mucosal nerve fiber density in resected rectosigmoid specimens and classified HSCR patients accordingly into nerve fiber-high or fiber-low groups. We compared the distribution of clinical parameters obtained from medical records between the fiber-high (n = 36) and fiber-low (n = 68) patient groups. We assessed the association between fiber phenotype and enterocolitis using univariate and multivariate logistic regression adjusted for age at operation.
Results: Enterocolitis was more prevalent in patients with sparse mucosal nerve fiber innervation (fiber-low phenotype, 87%) compared with the fiber-high phenotype (13%; p = 0.002). In addition, patients developing enterocolitis had a younger age at surgery (3 vs. 7 months; p = 0.016). In the univariate analysis, the odds for enterocolitis development in the fiber-low phenotype was 5.26 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.67-16.59; p = 0.005) and 4.01 (95% CI, 1.22-13.17; p = 0.022) when adjusted for age.
Conclusion: Here, we showed that HSCR patients with a low mucosal nerve fiber innervation grade in the distal aganglionic colon have a higher risk of developing HAEC. Consequently, histopathologic analysis of the nerve fiber innervation grade could serve as a novel sensitive prognostic marker associated with the development of enterocolitis in HSCR patients.
Thieme. All rights reserved.