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Title: Mild changes of hepatic nodular regenerative hyperplasia may cause portal hypertension and be visible on reticulin but not hematoxylin and eosin staining. Author: Navale P, Gonzalez RS. Journal: Virchows Arch; 2021 Dec; 479(6):1145-1152. PubMed ID: 34435237. Abstract: Nodular regenerative hyperplasia (NRH) can manifest as alternating parenchymal compression/expansion on hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining and as reticulin collapse/nodularity on reticulin staining. Histologic diagnosis can be challenging, especially when there is mild disease and on limited biopsy samples. We reviewed clinical and histologic parameters in a large series of NRH. We identified 60 liver specimens convincingly showing changes of NRH and reviewed them for clinical (age, sex, symptoms, lab values, portal hypertension [PHTN], NRH etiology) and histologic (inflammation, sinusoidal dilation, cholestasis, architectural change, portal vascular abnormalities, degree of changes on reticulin) parameters. The cases came from 28 women and 32 men (median age: 54 years). Most (55, 92%) were biopsies. Thirty patients were symptomatic. Forty-five cases showed mild NRH changes on reticulin; 24 of these (53%) showed them on H&E as well. Fifteen demonstrated well-developed changes on reticulin, which were always seen on H&E as well. Sinusoidal dilation was commonly observed in both of these subgroups (88% overall). Portal vascular abnormalities were seen in 33%. Well-developed NRH was diffuse more often than mild NRH (53% vs. 4%, P < 0.0001). Twenty-nine patients had clinically confirmed or likely PHTN. Of these, 21 showed mild and 8 showed well-developed NRH changes; only 3 had concomitant advanced fibrosis. Chemotherapy was the most frequent known cause of NRH; 30 patients lacked any definite etiology. NRH can be difficult to diagnose on biopsy, particularly since mild changes may be visible on reticulin but not H&E; even these patients can have PHTN. Additionally, NRH is often idiopathic, potentially lowering clinical and pathologic suspicion. Pathologists should have a low threshold for ordering reticulin stains, especially when a patient is known to have PHTN. Sinusoidal dilation, while nonspecific, commonly accompanies NRH.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]