Journal of Immunology Research (Jan 2015)

Achalasia—An Autoimmune Inflammatory Disease: A Cross-Sectional Study

  • J. Furuzawa-Carballeda,
  • D. Aguilar-León,
  • A. Gamboa-Domínguez,
  • M. A. Valdovinos,
  • C. Nuñez-Álvarez,
  • L. A. Martín-del-Campo,
  • A. B. Enríquez,
  • E. Coss-Adame,
  • A. E. Svarch,
  • A. Flores-Nájera,
  • A. Villa-Baños,
  • J. C. Ceballos,
  • G. Torres-Villalobos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/729217
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2015

Abstract

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Idiopathic achalasia is a disease of unknown etiology. The loss of myenteric plexus associated with inflammatory infiltrates and autoantibodies support the hypothesis of an autoimmune mechanism. Thirty-two patients diagnosed by high-resolution manometry with achalasia were included. Twenty-six specimens from lower esophageal sphincter muscle were compared with 5 esophagectomy biopsies (control). Immunohistochemical (biopsies) and flow cytometry (peripheral blood) analyses were performed. Circulating anti-myenteric autoantibodies were evaluated by indirect immunofluorescence. Herpes simplex virus-1 (HSV-1) infection was determined by in situ hybridization, RT-PCR, and immunohistochemistry. Histopathological analysis showed capillaritis (51%), plexitis (23%), nerve hypertrophy (16%), venulitis (7%), and fibrosis (3%). Achalasia tissue exhibited an increase in the expression of proteins involved in extracellular matrix turnover, apoptosis, proinflammatory and profibrogenic cytokines, and Tregs and Bregs versus controls (P<0.001). Circulating Th22/Th17/Th2/Th1 percentage showed a significant increase versus healthy donors (P<0.01). Type III achalasia patients exhibited the highest inflammatory response versus types I and II. Prevalence of both anti-myenteric antibodies and HSV-1 infection in achalasia patients was 100% versus 0% in controls. Our results suggest that achalasia is a disease with an important local and systemic inflammatory autoimmune component, associated with the presence of specific anti-myenteric autoantibodies, as well as HSV-1 infection.