Dunbar Karen J, Lee Su-Hyung, Won Yoonkyung, Esquea Emily M, Yang Jeong Yun, Kechele Daniel O, Ryeom Sandra, Abrams Julian A, McKeon Frank D, Wells James M, Quante Micheal, Choi Eunyoung, Que Jianwen, Wang Timothy C, Rustgi Anil K, Goldenring James R
Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, Columbia University, New York, New York; Vagelos Collage of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, Columbia University, New York, New York.
Epithelial Biology Center, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee.
Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2025 Aug 11;19(12):101611. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2025.101611.
Metaplasia is an adaptative response to injury and inflammation and can be a precursor to dysplasia and cancer. Metaplasia in the esophagus, termed Barrett's esophagus, is the replacement of the stratified squamous epithelium by glandular tissue comprising gastric and/or intestinal cell lineages. Metaplasia in the stomach can be divided further into pyloric metaplasia, in which corpus glands become more antral-like, or gastric intestinal metaplasia (GIM), in which gastric cells are replaced by intestinal cell lineages, with the latter subdivided into complete and incomplete. The routine diagnosis of metaplasia and dysplasia is performed by examining hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections and mucin immunohistochemistry. However, these methods fail to capture the cellular diversity across glands and the molecular changes in cells that can predict possible progression to dysplasia or cancer. The use of immunohistochemistry- or immunofluorescence-based biomarkers can improve our understanding of gland phenotypes and aid the differentiation of metaplastic and dysplastic transitions. Here, we provide an overview of the pathophysiology of metaplasia in the esophagus and stomach and detail the current understanding of biomarker expression across metaplastic transitions. We suggest a cohort of biomarkers that can differentiate between metaplastic phenotypes in the esophagus (gastric-type and intestinal-type) and the stomach (pyloric metaplasia, incomplete GIM, and complete GIM) that might be used in research and clinical settings. Importantly, we detail the status of dysplasia biomarkers in both the esophagus and stomach, which may have clinical relevance in stratification of high-risk patients.
化生是对损伤和炎症的一种适应性反应,可能是发育异常和癌症的先兆。食管中的化生,即巴雷特食管,是由包含胃和/或肠细胞谱系的腺组织取代复层鳞状上皮。胃中的化生可进一步分为幽门化生(胃体腺变得更像胃窦腺)或胃小肠化生(GIM,胃细胞被肠细胞谱系取代),后者又分为完全型和不完全型。化生和发育异常的常规诊断是通过检查苏木精-伊红染色切片和黏液免疫组织化学来进行的。然而,这些方法无法捕捉腺体间的细胞多样性以及可预测向发育异常或癌症可能进展的细胞分子变化。基于免疫组织化学或免疫荧光的生物标志物的使用可以增进我们对腺体表型的理解,并有助于区分化生和发育异常的转变。在这里,我们概述了食管和胃化生的病理生理学,并详细阐述了目前对化生转变过程中生物标志物表达的理解。我们提出了一组生物标志物,它们可以区分食管(胃型和肠型)和胃(幽门化生、不完全GIM和完全GIM)中的化生表型,这些标志物可用于研究和临床环境。重要的是,我们详细介绍了食管和胃中发育异常生物标志物的情况,它们在高危患者分层中可能具有临床相关性。