Biomolecules (Oct 2023)

Historical Cohort Study of Congenital Isolated Hypoganglionosis of the Intestine: Determining the Best Surgical Interventions

  • Yohei Yamada,
  • Teizaburo Mori,
  • Nobuhiro Takahashi,
  • Takumi Fujimura,
  • Motohiro Kano,
  • Mototoshi Kato,
  • Masataka Takahashi,
  • Naoki Shimojima,
  • Toshihiko Watanabe,
  • Takako Yoshioka,
  • Yutaka Kanamori,
  • Tatsuo Kuroda,
  • Akihiro Fujino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom13101560
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. 1560

Abstract

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No standard diagnostic method or surgical treatment for congenital isolated hypoganglionosis (CIHG) has been established. This study aimed to analyze the clinical outcomes of patients with CIHG and identify the best surgical interventions provided thus far. Data on surgical interventions in 19 patients were collected between 1992 and 2020, including the type of enterostomy, type of revision, and length of the intestines. Ganglion cells in the myenteric plexus were enumerated using Hu C/D staining. The ratio of the length of the small intestine to its height was defined as the intestinal ratio (IR). The outcomes were assessed using the stoma output, growth parameters including the body mass index (BMI), and parenteral nutrition (PN) dependency. All patients required a diverting enterostomy. The IR ranged from 0.51 to 1.75 after multiple non-transplant surgeries. The stoma types were tube-stoma, end-stoma, Santulli-type, and Bishop–Koop (BK)-type. Patients with Santulli- or BK-type stomas had better BMIs and less PN dependency in terms of volume than those with end-stomas or tube-stomas. Two patients with BK-type stomas were off PN, and three who underwent an intestinal transplantation (Itx) achieved enteral autonomy. The management of CIHG involves a precise diagnosis using Hu C/D staining, neonatal enterostomy, and stoma revision using the adjusted IR and Itx if other treatments do not enable enteral autonomy.

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