Review
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2022.
World J Gastroenterol. Nov 7, 2022; 28(41): 5893-5909
Published online Nov 7, 2022. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v28.i41.5893
Table 2 Studies on esophageal lichen planus (numbers in braces indicate number/percentage of patients from the cohort to which the criterion applies)
Ref.Study designNumber of ELP casesFurther manifestation sites of LPMacroscopic findings as described in the manuscriptHistologic findings as described in the manuscriptSigns and symptomsTherapy
Keate et al[53], 2003Case series3 (all)Cutaneous oral genitalMucosal sloughing stenosisBand-like infiltrate hyperkeratosis acanthosisDysphagiaTacrolimus intralesional Pred. Response 3/3; Etretinate (no effect)
Donnellan et al[116], 2011Case series5 (all)Oral (all), genital (2), cutaneous (1)Ulcerations, stricturesBand-like lymphocytic infiltrate, civatte bodiesDysphagia (all)Dilation (4) Flut; Response 3/5
Franco et al[69], 2015Case series6 (83%)Cutaneous and oral (4)Ulcerations, strictures (5)Band-like lymph infiltrate, civatte bodies, fibrinogen + in DIFDysphagia (all), food impaction (2)Dilation (3) Flut/Pred/Triam. Response 5/5
Dickens et al[74], 199019 LP patients5Cutaneous (19), oral (4)Papular lesions, mucosal detachment on biopsy, erosionsSubmucosal lymphocytic infiltrateDysphagia (1)
Harewood et al[65], 1999Retrospective search in patient register6 (100%)Oral (5), genital (3), cutaneous (2), ELP as initial manifestation (5)Proximal strictures (4)Lymphocytic infiltration (4)Dysphagia (6); odynophagia (2)Dilation of strictures (6); Prednisone (40-60mg). Response 3/4
Quispel et al[16], 200924 LP patients12Oral and/or cutaneous (all)Whitish papules (10), hyperemic lesions (3), mucosal detachment (2), submucosal plaques (3)Lymphohistiocytic infiltrations para-/hyperkeratosis, hyperplasia, civatte bodies, glycogen akanthosisDysphagia (4), odynophagia (3), heart burn (3), regurgitation (2)
Katzka et al[17], 2010Retrospecitve review (10 years) of data base/ esophageal biopsies from patients with dysphagia27 (92%)Oral (19), genital (13), cutaneous (3), ELP as initial manifestation (13)Strictures (18): Proximal (11), distal (3), both (4), mucosal detachment (11), erythema, plaques, whitish mucosa, superficial ulcerations, Koebner effect after dilatLichenoid lymphocytic infiltration, damage of ephithelial basal layer civatte bodies squamous cell carcinoma (1)Dysphagia (27); odynophagia (2)Dilation of strictures (17). Dilation + Fluticasone Response 10/11. No dilation plus intralesional corticosteroids (2) or swallowed Futicason/ Budesonide (2). Response 6/6
Fox et al[77], 2011Review of published ELP cases until 2009 (including 4 own cases)72 (87%)Oral (89%), genital (42%), cutaneous (38%), scalp (7%); nails (3%), eyes (1%), ELP as initial manifestation (14)Pseudomembranes, bleeding, fragility, inflammation; proximal (64%); distal (11%); Both (26%); Stenosis (47%)Lichenoid lymphocytic infiltrates; dysplasia/squamous cell carcinoma (6%)Dysphagia (81%); odynophagia (24%); weight loss (14%); heart burn (8%); regurgitation (3%); hoarseness (1%); asymptomatic (17%)
Linton et al[66], 2013Retrospective analysis of esophageal biopsies from 273 patients out of a large cohort1 typical ELP; 6 possible ELPNo dataInflammation (7); stricture (5); trachealization (4) mucosal fragility (1); ulcerations (3); nodules (3)Lymphocytic infiltration (7); Civatte bodies (1); parakeratosis (6); mixed infiltration (6) elongation of lamina propria papillae (7) hyperplasia of basal cells (4); widened intercellular space (3); neutrophilic inflamm (1)Dysphagia (7); odynophagia (4)Dilation of stenosis (3). Topical Fluticasone (2). Response 2/2. Proton pump inhibitors (7). Sucralfate (2). 5-HT4-RA (1)
Podboy et al[19], 2017Retrospective analysis of a cohort of ELP-patients40 (80%)Cutaneous (4), oral (19), genital (15), ELP as only; manifestation (13)Strictures (29), ring formation (29), ulcerations (8), mucosal detachment (6), other mucosal, lesions (14), squameous cell carcinoma (2)Common findings (> 5): Esophagitis (20), focal ulcerations (13), mucosal hyperplasia (10), intraepithelial lymphocytic infiltrate (13), eosinophilia < 5 (13) dyskeratosis (11). DIF positive: Lichenoid (2) equivocal (5) not evaluable because of mucosal detachment (13)Dysphagia for solid food (32) even for fluids (8); odynophagia (6); reflux (1)Topical corticosteroids: Budesonide in honey 2 x 3mg (32). Fluticasone spray 880 µg 2x/d (8). Response rate: Endoscopic (72,5%), clinical (62%)
Ravi et al[101], 2019Retrospective analysis of ELP patients132 (80%)Clinical diagnosis (77)“Specific histology” (55); Esophageal carcinoma (8)Response to topical steroids 84/132 63.6%. Immunosuppressive; therapy necessary 38/132. Response: No data
Kern et al[18], 2016; Schauer et al[20], 201952 patients.with proven LP on other site (75%)34mild (18); severe (16)Oral 78-100% (vs 78% in non-ELP), genital 44-61% (vs 6% non-ELP). Cutaneous 25-44% (vs 28% non-ELP)Mucosal detachment iatrogenic (12); spontaneous (16); hyperkeratosis (7); trachealization (10); stenosis/strictures (7)Epithelial detachment, lymphocytic infiltration, Civatte bodies, dyskeratosis; DIF: Fibrinogen deposits (17); (85% in severe ELP)Dysphagia. severe ELP: 15; mild ELP: 8Topical corticosteroids (12). Budesonide gel 3x0.5mg. Fluticasone. Response 11/12. Stenosis: Topical corticosteroids dilation