Background/Purpose: Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) and IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD) are both immune-mediated conditions that can involve multiple organ systems. In GPA, IgG4-positive plasma cell infiltration has been reported in the kidneys and upper respiratory tract, leading to potential confusion between these two disorders. We sought to determine the degree of IgG4-positive plasma cell infiltration within lung biopsies from patients with ANCA-positive and ANCA-negative GPA, and compared the histopathological and immunohistochemical findings in GPA to biopsies from patients with IgG4-related pulmonary disease.
Methods: Patients with GPA (n=154) were identified by searching the pathology database of the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) for search terms “lung” and “Wegener’s”. Nine ANCA-positive and 4 ANCA-negative patients with wedge biopsy samples of the lung were selected for further analysis. Their clinical, radiologic, and pathologic data were compared to those of 5 patients with IgG4-related pulmonary disease. Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained slides were reviewed in a blinded manner. Immunohistochemistry was performed using antibodies to IgG4 and IgG and subsequently counted by averaging 3 high-power fields (hpf). The histopathologic features were compared using Fisher’s exact test and IgG4+ plasma cells counts by unpaired t-tests.
Results: The mean number of IgG4+ plasma cells in lung biopsy samples was higher among the IgG4-RD patients compared to those with GPA. The mean for the IgG4-RD biopsies was 101 IgG4+ plasma cells/hpf (range: 13-240 IgG4+ cells), compared with 25 cells (range: 0-135) for the GPA patients (P=0.035). IgG4+ plasma cells were numerically higher among GPA patients who were ANCA-positive as opposed to ANCA-negative (40 vs. 11 cells, respectively). Three of the 9 ANCA-positive GPA patients had IgG4+ plasma cell infiltrates that exceeded the minimum number considered characteristic of IgG4-RD in the lung (>50 IgG4+ plasma cells/hpf).
Comparisons of the histopathologic features between GPA and IgG4-RD are shown in Table 1. Two sets of findings were critical in distinguishing the pulmonary pathology of ANCA-positive GPA and IgG4-RD: 1) Obliterative phlebitis, present in 80% of the IgG4-RD biopsies, was not observed in any GPA cases; and, 2) Features of granulomatous inflammation – histiocytes, granulomas, and multi-nucleated giant cells – were absent in IgG4-RD.
Conclusion: Lung biopsies from both IgG4-RD and GPA patients are characterized by lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates and IgG4+ plasma cells. Histopathological features, particularly the finding of obliterative phlebitis in IgG4-RD and the absence of granulomatous inflammation, are essential in distinguishing between these conditions.
Table 1: Lung Histopathologic Features: Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) versus IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD).
Pathology Features |
GPA |
IgG4-RD |
P-Value
|
GPA |
|
|
|
Neutrophilic Abscesses |
6/9 (67%) |
0/5 (0) |
0.03* |
Histiocytes |
8/9 (89%) |
0/5 (0) |
0.003* |
Giant cells |
8/9 (89%) |
0/5 (0) |
0.003* |
Granulomas |
8/9 (89%) |
0/5 (0) |
0.003* |
Necrotizing granulomas |
2/9 (22%) |
0/5 (0) |
NS |
Vasculitis |
3/9 (33%) |
0/5 (0) |
NS |
Hemorrhage |
5/9 (56%) |
0/5 (0) |
NS |
|
|
|
|
IgG4-RD |
|
|
|
Lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate |
8/9 (89%) |
5/5 (100%) |
NS |
Tissue eosinophilia |
3/9 (33%) |
3/5 (60%) |
NS |
Storiform fibrosis |
3/9 (33%) |
5/5 (100%) |
0.03* |
Obliterative phlebitis |
0 (0) |
4/5 (80%) |
0.005* |
Disclosure:
M. Carruthers,
None;
S. Shinagare,
None;
A. Khosroshahi,
None;
V. Deshpande,
None;
J. H. Stone,
Genentech,
5.
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