Context.—Autoimmune gastritis (AG) is a corpus-restricted chronic atrophic gastritis associated with intrinsic factor deficiency, either with or without pernicious anemia. Autoimmune gastritis is a microscopic disease because patients present with no or vague symptoms, and clinicians rarely find endoscopic changes. Autoimmune gastritis only becomes a clinical disease when pathologists diagnose it in gastric biopsies performed for a variety of clinical indications. Unfamiliarity with this disease can result in misdiagnosis of patients, and thus inadequate patient management. Objective.—To review the pathogenesis, clinical features, diagnostic criteria, differential diagnoses, sequelae, and surveillance recommendations for AG. Data Sources.—The sources of the study include a review of the pertinent literature for AG. Conclusions.—Autoimmune gastritis is an important disease characterized by a loss of oxyntic mucosa and presence of metaplastic epithelium and enterochromaffin-like cell hyperplasia. Awareness and proper diagnosis are critical to prevent mismanagement of patients.
CITATION STYLE
Hall, S. N., & Appelman, H. D. (2019). Autoimmune gastritis. In Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (Vol. 143, pp. 1327–1331). College of American Pathologists. https://doi.org/10.5858/arpa.2019-0345-RA
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