Definition and Normal Physiology

Protein-losing gastroenteropathy describes a diverse group of disorders associated with excessive loss of serum proteins into the GI tract. This excess serum protein loss can result in hypoproteinemia and may be manifested by edema, ascites, and malnutrition. Box 31.1 lists disorders associated with protein-losing gastroenteropathy.

BOX 31.1
Disorders Associated with Protein-Losing Gastroenteropathy

Diseases Without Mucosal Erosions or Ulcerations

  • AIDS-associated gastroenteropathy

  • Acute viral gastroenteritis

  • Allergic gastroenteropathy

  • Celiac disease

  • Cobalamin deficiency

  • Collagenous colitis

  • Cytomegalovirus infection

  • Eosinophilic gastroenteritis

  • Giant hypertrophic gastropathy (Ménétrier disease)

  • Giardiasis, schistosomiasis, nematodiasis (capillariasis), strongyloidiasis

  • Graft-versus-host disease

  • Hp gastritis

  • Henoch-Schönlein purpura

  • Hypertrophic hypersecretory gastropathy

  • Intestinal parasitosis

  • Lymphocytic colitis

  • Lymphocytic gastritis

  • Mixed connective tissue disease

  • Paracoccidiomycosis

  • Postmeasles diarrhea

  • SIBO

  • Sjögren syndrome

  • Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)

  • Tropical sprue

  • Vascular ectasia (gastric, colonic)

  • Whipple disease

Diseases With Mucosal Erosions or Ulcerations

  • α-Chain disease

  • Amyloidosis

  • Behçet disease

  • Carcinoid syndrome

  • Crohn disease

  • Duodenitis

  • Erosive gastritis

  • GI carcinomas

  • Graft-versus-host disease

  • Hp gastritis

  • Idiopathic ulcerative jejunoileitis

  • Infectious diarrhea (e.g., Clostridium difficile , Shigella spp. )

  • Ischemic colitis

  • Kaposi sarcoma

  • Leukemia/lymphoma

  • Melanoma

  • Multiple myeloma

  • Neurofibromatosis

  • NSAID enteropathy

  • Sarcoidosis

  • Toxic shock syndrome (Streptococcus pyogenes)

  • Waldenström macroglobulinemia

Diseases With Lymphatic Obstruction or Elevated Lymphatic Pressure

  • Budd-Chiari syndrome

  • Cardiac disease

  • CD 55 deficiency

  • Constrictive pericarditis, heart failure, tricuspid regurgitation, Fontan procedure

  • Crohn disease

  • Intestinal endometriosis

  • Intestinal lymphangiectasia (congenital, acquired)

  • Lymphatic-enteric fistula

  • Lymphoma, including mycosis fungoides

  • Mesenteric TB and sarcoidosis

  • Mesenteric venous thrombosis

  • Neoplastic disease involving mesenteric lymphatics

  • Portal hypertensive gastroenteropathy

  • Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease

  • Retroperitoneal fibrosis

  • Sclerosing mesenteritis

  • Superior vena cava thrombosis

  • SLE

  • TB peritonitis

  • Whipple disease

In 1947, Maimon and colleagues postulated that fluid emanating from the large gastric folds in patients with Ménétrier disease was rich in protein. In 1949, Albright and colleagues discovered, using IV infusions of albumin, that hypoproteinemia resulted from excessive catabolism of albumin rather than decreased albumin synthesis. By 1956, Kimbel and colleagues demonstrated an increase in gastric albumin production in patients with chronic gastritis. A year later, Citrin and colleagues were able to show that the GI tract was the actual site of excess protein loss in patients with Ménétrier disease. They showed that the excess loss of IV-administered radioiodinated albumin could be explained by the appearance of labeled protein in the gastric secretions of such patients.

Subsequent research using radiolabeled polyvinylpyrrolidone, albumin, and other proteins, as well as immunologic methods measuring enteric loss of α 1 -antitrypsin (α 1 -AT), has further characterized the role of the GI tract in the metabolism of serum proteins. In fact, GI tract loss of albumin normally accounts for only 2% to 5% of the total body degradation of albumin, but in patients with severe protein-losing GI disorders, this enteric protein loss may extend to up to 60% of the total albumin pool.

Under physiologic conditions, most endogenous proteins found in the lumen of the GI tract are derived from sloughed enterocytes and from pancreatic and biliary secretions. Studies of serum protein loss into the GI tract measured by various methods (e.g., 67 Cu-ceruloplasmin, 51 Cr-albumin, α 1 -AT clearance) have shown that daily enteric loss of serum proteins accounts for less than 1% to 2% of the serum protein pool in healthy individuals, with enteric loss of albumin accounting for less than 10% of total albumin catabolism. In normal women and men, the total albumin pool is approximately 3.9 g/kg and 4.7 g/kg, respectively, with a half-life of 15 to 33 days and a rate of hepatic albumin synthesis of 0.15 g/kg/day, equaling the rate of albumin degradation. Excess proteins that enter the upper GI tract are metabolized by existing proteases much like other peptides, broken down to constituent amino acids, and then reabsorbed. In healthy individuals, GI losses play only a minor role in total protein metabolism, and serum protein levels reflect the balance between protein synthesis and total protein metabolism. However, this balance can be altered markedly in patients with protein-losing gastroenteropathy.

Pathophysiology

Excessive plasma protein loss across the GI epithelium can result from several pathologic mucosal processes. Mucosal injury can result in increased permeability to plasma proteins; mucosal erosions and ulcerations can result in weeping of an inflammatory protein-rich exudate, and lymphatic obstruction or increased lymphatic hydrostatic pressure can result in direct leakage of lymph, which contains plasma proteins. Changes in vascular permeability can affect the concentration of serum proteins in the interstitial fluid, thereby influencing the amount of enteric mucosal protein loss.

Examining the pathogenesis of protein-losing gastroenteropathy, Bode and colleagues have suggested that the condition might be related to loss of heparan sulfate proteins that are normally present on the surface of intestinal epithelial cells. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans appear to affect the intestinal barrier by having large extracellular domains that bind to the plasma membrane, known as syndecans , or are attached to a membrane glycolipid called a glypican . These syndecans are important in the maintenance of tight intercellular junctions.

Mice that were genetically altered to lack syndecans or other heparan sulfate proteins have alterations to the normal tight intercellular barrier and leak protein via paracellular pathways into the intestinal lumen ( Fig. 31.1 ). Moreover, treatment of such mice with proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α or interferon-γ leads to significantly defective intercellular junctions and even greater protein loss into the intestine. The combination of a syndecan-deficient state and exposure to proinflammatory cytokines leads to even greater albumin flux and protein loss. Finally, reintroduction of heparin sulfate or other syndecans abolishes the protein loss into the lumen of the bowel.

Fig. 31.1, Diagrams illustrating the factors that contribute to intestinal integrity in the mouse. A, The normal mouse intestine is an effective barrier against the free diffusion of certain ions, nutrient solutes, proteins, bacteria, and toxins to separate the intestinal lumen (outside) from the lamina propria (inside) effectively. B, Syndecan-1–deficient mice have decreased intestinal barrier function as a result of defective intercellular junctions and increased paracellular leaks ( dashed line ) or increased transcellular protein transport ( solid line ). 13 C, Syndecan-1–deficient mice that were given inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α and interferon-γ) or operated on to increase their portal venous pressure have massively defective intercellular junctions and large intercellular protein leaks ( dashed lines ), consistent with protein-losing enteropathy. D, Infusions of heparin sulfate analogs completely reverse the intestinal barrier dysfunction seen in syndecan-1–deficient mice given inflammatory cytokines. See text for more details.

The loss of serum proteins in patients with protein-losing gastroenteropathy is independent of their molecular weight, and therefore the fraction of the intravascular pool degraded daily remains the same for various proteins, including albumin, immunoglobulin (IgG, IgA, IgM), and ceruloplasmin. In contrast, patients with nephrotic syndrome selectively lose lower molecular weight proteins such as albumin. As proteins enter the GI tract, synthesis of new proteins occurs in a compensatory fashion. Proteins that enter the GI tract are metabolized into constituent amino acids by gastric, pancreatic, and small intestinal enzymes, reabsorbed by specific transporters, and recirculated. When the rate of gastric or enteric protein loss, or both, exceeds the body’s capacity to synthesize new protein, hypoproteinemia develops. Hypoalbuminemia, for example, is common in protein-losing gastroenteropathy and results when there is an imbalance between hepatic albumin synthesis, which is limited and can increase only by 25%, and albumin loss, with reductions in the total body albumin pool and albumin half-life.

Adaptive changes in endogenous protein catabolism may compensate for excessive enteric protein loss, resulting in unequal loss of specific proteins. For example, proteins like insulin, some clotting factors, and IgE have rapid catabolic turnover rates (short half-lives) and, as such, are relatively unaffected by GI losses, because rapid synthesis of these proteins ensues. On the other hand, enhanced synthesis of proteins such as albumin and most immunoglobulins, except IgE, is limited, and thus protein loss from the gut will be manifested by hypoproteinemia (hypoalbuminemia and hypoglobulinemia). Other factors also can contribute to the excessive enteric protein loss seen in various diseases. These include impaired hepatic protein synthesis and increased endogenous degradation of plasma proteins.

In addition to causing hypoproteinemia, protein-losing gastroenteropathy can be associated with reduced concentrations of other serum components (e.g., lipids, iron, trace metals). Lymphatic obstruction can result in lymphopenia, with resultant alterations in cellular immunity.

Clinical Features

Hypoproteinemia and edema are the principal clinical manifestations of protein-losing gastroenteropathy. Pleural and pericardial effusions, as well as malnutrition, are also commonly seen. Most other clinical features reflect the underlying disease process and, as such, the clinical presentation of patients with protein-losing gastroenteropathy is varied ( Box 31.2 ). Protein-losing gastroenteropathy is seen in both pediatric and adult populations. Hypoproteinemia, the most common clinical sequela, is manifested by a decrease in serum levels of albumin, most immunoglobulins (IgG, IgA, and IgM, but not IgE), fibrinogen, lipoproteins, α 1 -AT, transferrin, and ceruloplasmin. Levels of rapid-turnover proteins, such as retinal binding protein and prealbumin, are typically preserved, despite hypoproteinemia. Dependent edema is frequently a clinically significant issue, and results from diminished plasma oncotic pressure. Anasarca is rare in protein-losing gastroenteropathy. Unilateral edema, upper extremity edema, facial edema, macular edema (with reversible blindness), and bilateral retinal detachments have been seen as a consequence of intestinal lymphangiectasia. Despite the decrease in serum gamma globulin levels, increased susceptibility to infections is uncommon. Although clotting factors may be lost into the GI tract, resynthesis is rapid and in general, coagulation status typically remains unaffected. On the other hand, angiopathic thrombosis has been noted in certain situations (discussed later). Circulating levels of proteins that bind hormones, such as cortisol-binding globulin and thyroid-binding globulin, may be substantially decreased, but levels of circulating free hormones are not significantly altered.

BOX 31.2
Clinical Manifestations of Protein-Losing Gastroenteropathy

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