A unifying working hypothesis for juvenile polyposis syndrome and Ménétrier's disease: specific localization or concomitant occurrence of a separate entity?

Journal: Digestive And Liver Disease : Official Journal Of The Italian Society Of Gastroenterology And The Italian Association For The Study Of The Liver
Published:
Abstract

Background: Juvenile polyposis syndrome with gastric involvement may mimic Ménétrier's disease, which is correlated to transforming growth factor (TGF)α overproduction and PDX1 upregulation in the gastric fundus.

Objective: We report a family with juvenile polyposis syndrome where one member showed typical features of Ménétrier's disease and concomitant Helicobacter pylori infection.

Methods: We studied a 31-year-old woman belonging to a family with juvenile polyposis syndrome, who exhibited a particular form of hyperplastic gastropathy diagnosed as Ménétrier's disease with Helicobacter pylori infection.

Results: TGFα overexpression and undetectable PDX1 expression were demonstrated in the fundic gastric biopsy specimens. In all affected members of the family we identified a 4-bp deletion in exon 9 of SMAD4 gene, a mutation usually associated with a more virulent form of juvenile polyposis syndrome with a higher incidence of gastric and colonic polyposis.

Conclusions: To explain the association of juvenile polyposis syndrome with Ménétrier's disease we hypothesized a new mechanism that involves TGFβ-SMAD4 pathway inactivation and TGFα overexpression related to Helicobacter pylori infection.