Pancreatic B-cell proliferation in persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy: an immunohistochemical study of 18 cases.

C Sempoux, Y Guiot, D Dubois… - Modern pathology: an …, 1998 - europepmc.org
C Sempoux, Y Guiot, D Dubois, MC Nollevaux, JM Saudubray, C Nihoul-Fekete, J Rahier
Modern pathology: an official journal of the United States and Canadian …, 1998europepmc.org
Persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy (PHHI) is characterized by severe
hypoglycemia related to inappropriate insulin secretion. Morphologically, a tumoral and a
nontumoral form are recognized. The tumoral form can be subdivided into adenomatous
hyperplasia (in infants) and adenoma (in children). On the other hand, nesidioblastosis,
considered until recently as a persistent B-cell replication, has repeatedly been proposed as
the condition responsible for the nontumoral form of PHHI. We studied the proliferation rate …
Persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy (PHHI) is characterized by severe hypoglycemia related to inappropriate insulin secretion. Morphologically, a tumoral and a nontumoral form are recognized. The tumoral form can be subdivided into adenomatous hyperplasia (in infants) and adenoma (in children). On the other hand, nesidioblastosis, considered until recently as a persistent B-cell replication, has repeatedly been proposed as the condition responsible for the nontumoral form of PHHI. We studied the proliferation rate of B cells in 18 patients affected by PHHI (7 nontumoral and 11 tumoral cases, including 4 adenomas and 7 adenomatous hyperplasias) and in 18 age-matched controls, using a double immunohistochemical technique detecting Ki-67, a nuclear endogenous antigen only present during cell proliferation, and insulin as pancreatic B-cell markers. Our results clearly show that" nesidioblastosis" is not related to an abnormal B-cell proliferation, because the B-cell labeling index (LI), reported as the mean plus or minus the standard error of the mean, is not statistically different between nontumoral PHHI (29.4+/-7.4) and age-matched controls (19.6+/-5.3). Furthermore, the Ki-67 positivity was not more prominent in small clusters of B cells in nesidioblastosis than in large islets. In tumoral PHHI, the LI was significantly higher in cases of focal adenomatous hyperplasia (77.6+/-10.9) than in either age-matched controls (19.9+/-6.9; P<. 005) or in adenomas (27.9+/-13.7; P<. 025); the values of this last group did not differ from those of age-matched controls (18.5+/-8.5). These data definitely demonstrate that nesidioblastosis does not correspond to an abnormal B-cell proliferation and that the focal forms of PHHI must be subclassified.
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