# Postoperative Hirschsprung’s associated enterocolitis (HAEC): transition zone as putative histopathological predictive factor

**Authors:** Miriam Duci, Luisa Santoro, Angelo Paolo Dei Tos, Greta Loss, Claudia Mescoli, Piergiorgio Gamba, Francesco Fascetti Leon

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/jcp-2023-209129 · Journal of Clinical Pathology · 2023-11-23

## TL;DR

Short transition zones in Hirschsprung disease patients are linked to a higher risk of post-surgery enterocolitis, suggesting histopathology can help predict and prevent complications.

## Contribution

Identifies transition zone length as a novel histopathological predictor for postoperative HAEC in Hirschsprung disease.

## Key findings

- A transition zone length <2.25 cm is an independent predictor of post-HAEC.
- Inflammation in ganglionic bowel correlates with increased post-HAEC risk.
- Preoperative HAEC history and short transition zones are linked to severe post-HAEC.

## Abstract

Hirschsprung’s-associated enterocolitis (HAEC) is the most severe complication of Hirschsprung disease (HD), and its pathogenesis is still unknown. Length of transition zone (TZ) interposed between aganglionic and normal bowel has been poorly explored as predictor for postoperative HAEC (post-HAEC). This study aimed to identify potential predictive factors for post-HAEC, with a particular focus on histopathological findings.

Data from Hirschsprung patients treated in a single Italian centre between 2010 and 2022 with a follow-up >6 months were collected. Thorough histopathological examination of the resected bowel was conducted, focusing on length of TZ and aganglionic bowel.The degree of inflammatory changes in ganglionic resected bowel was further obtained. Ultra-long HD, total colonic aganglionosis and ultra-short HD were excluded. Bivariate and multivariate regression analysis were performed.

Thirty-one patients were included; 5 experienced preoperative HAEC (pre-HAEC) and later post-HAEC (16.1%), further 10 patients developed post-HAEC (total post-HAEC 48.38%). Pre-HAEC-history and a TZ<2.25 cm correlated with an early development of post-HAEC. Multivariate analysis identified a TZ<2.25 cm as an independent post-HAEC predictive factor (p=0.0096). Inflammation within the ganglionic zone and a TZ<2.25 cm correlated with higher risk of post-HAEC (p=0.0074, 0.001, respectively). Severe post-HAEC more frequently occurred in patients with pre-HAEC (p=0.011), histological inflammation (p=0.0009) and short TZ (p=0.0015).

This study suggests that TZ<2.25 cm predicts the risk of post-HAEC. Preoperative clinical and histopathology inflammation may predispose to worst post-HAEC. Readily available histopathological findings might help identifying patients at higher risk for HAEC and implementing prevention strategies.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Hirschsprung disease (MONDO:0007723)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HAEC (MESH:D004760), Inflammation (MESH:D007249), HD (MESH:D006627)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11874427/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11874427