An Analysis of the Clinical, Laboratory, and Histological Features of Striped, Punctate, and Nodular Gastric Antral Vascular Ectasia
Abstract
Background
Gastric antral vascular ectasia (GAVE) commonly presents as linear striped (“watermelon stomach”) or punctate phenotypes, to which a newly discovered nodular form was recently added.
Aims
We performed a retrospective cohort study to detail and compare the clinical and histological characteristics of major GAVE phenotypes.
Methods
In 136 GAVE patients (tertiary care ambulatory and inpatient, median age 61.3 years, 73 men, and 63 women), clinical and laboratory results were recorded, with comorbidities, endoscopy indications, and complications of cirrhosis. In 74 patients, GAVE histopathology was cataloged by a pathologist masked to endoscopy results.
Results
Median age 61.3 years, 73 men, and 63 women. GAVE phenotypes were: linear striped—62 (46%), punctate—32 (24%), and nodular—41 (30%). Endoscopy was commonly performed for variceal screening in linear striped (45%) and nodular (34%) GAVE and for gastrointestinal bleeding in punctate (41%) and nodular (29%) GAVE, respectively. Of 89 cirrhotic patients, 37.5% each had linear striped or nodular GAVE, 24.7% had punctate forms (p = 0.03). Child–Turcotte–Pugh and Model for End-Stage Liver Disease scores were similar among phenotypes. Histologically, reactive epithelial hyperplasia and vascular ectasia were universal; smooth muscle proliferation was more common and consistent (78–86%) than microvascular thrombi (27–59%) and fibrohyalinosis (18–53%), which each varied with phenotype.
Conclusions
Nodular GAVE is a gastric mucosal abnormality that is similar to the linear striped and punctate phenotypes, yet has distinct clinical and histological features. Increased awareness of nodular GAVE by endoscopists is needed to avoid its misdiagnosis as nonspecific antral nodules.
Publisher URL: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10620-018-4965-z
DOI: 10.1007/s10620-018-4965-z
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