Mucosal inflammation in Candida esophagitis has distinctive features that may be helpful diagnostically

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Abstract

The diagnosis of Candida esophagitis can be challenging when the epithelium containing Candida filamentous forms is not readily seen or is entirely sloughed away. Mucosal inflammation could be helpful diagnostically, if distinctive. However it is thought to be nonspecific in Candida esophagitis. The goal of this retrospective study was to identify features of mucosal inflammation helpful in alerting a pathologist to the possibility of Candida esophagitis when Candida mycelia are not readily observed. The study group consisted of 99 consecutive cases of Candida esophagitis and a control group of 64 consecutive cases of reflux esophagitis diagnosed at our institution from 2008–2016. Band-like superficial intraepithelial neutrophils and increased intraepithelial lymphocytes were observed in 75 and 67% of Candida esophagitis cases, respectively and only in 14 and 19% of reflux esophagitis cases, respectively (p

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Martin, I. W., Atkinson, A. E., Liu, X., Suriawinata, A. A., Lefferts, J. A., & Lisovsky, M. (2018). Mucosal inflammation in Candida esophagitis has distinctive features that may be helpful diagnostically. Modern Pathology, 31(11), 1653–1660. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41379-018-0060-4

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