A 62-year-old woman who was taking naproxen, methotrexate, and
leflunomide for treatment of long-standing, poorly controlled rheumatoid
arthritis was admitted because of a 4-week history of watery diarrhea and
abdominal pain. Laboratory studies revealed the following results: leukocytes
16.5 × 109/L, hemoglobin 9.8 g/dL,
platelets 899 × 109/L, total protein
62 g/L, albumin 29 g/L, and C-reactive protein 334 mg/L.
Tests of renal function were normal. On the second hospital day, she developed
fever and received broad-spectrum antibiotics, but she deteriorated clinically
over the next three days. Multiple stool tests gave negative results for
bacterial infection. Endoscopic examinations showed marked submucosal edema and
hemorrhagic erosions in the deep part of the duodenum and ileum ([Fig. 1 a]), and multiple biopsy specimens
revealed amyloid A (AA) protein deposition. A diagnosis of small-bowel AA
amyloidosis associated with rheumatoid arthritis was made ([Fig. 2]).
She was treated with anti-tumor necrosis factor-α
(TNF-α) antibody (infliximab, 5 mg/kg) at weeks 0, 2, and 6. After
the first dose of infliximab, results for the acute-phase reactants immediately
normalized, and her symptoms largely resolved within 3 days. A follow-up
endoscopy 8 weeks after treatment showed complete resolution of the intestinal
lesions ([Fig. 3]), and the amyloid deposition
had disappeared in the serial biopsy specimens. The patient has remained well
without recurrence of her gastrointestinal symptoms during 12 months of
follow-up.
Fig. 1 Marked submucosal edema
and multiple hemorrhagic erosions were seen in: a the
deep part of the duodenum at esophagogastroduodenoscopy; and b the ileum at single-balloon enteroscopy.
Fig. 2 Histopathological
evaluation of the biopsy specimens showed: a diffuse,
homogeneous Congo red-positive deposits in the submucosal layer (magnification
× 100) and (inset) typical birefringence under polarizing
microscopy (magnification × 400); b
diffuse, strong positivity for amyloid A protein with immunohistochemical study
using an anti-amyloid A protein antibody (magnification
× 200).
Fig. 3 Follow-up endoscopy 8
weeks after the first dose of infliximab revealed complete resolution of the
intestinal lesions in: a the duodenum; and
b the ileum.
Reactive amyloidosis is a critical complication with poor prognosis
in patients with chronic inflammatory diseases, and usually affects the kidney
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]. We present herein a case of reactive small-bowel
amyloidosis complicating rheumatoid arthritis, which was successfully treated
with a novel therapeutic agent, anti-TNF-α antibody. This case highlights
the fact that early comprehensive endoscopy and multiple endoscopic biopsies,
especially for small-bowel disease, are important for immediate diagnosis and
treatment in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and persistent gastrointestinal
symptoms.
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