@article{oai:soar-ir.repo.nii.ac.jp:00003860, author = {Kawa, Shigeyuki and Hamano, Hideaki and Ozaki, Yayoi and Ito, Tetsuya and Kodama, Ryou and Chou, Yoshimi and Takayama, Mari and Arakura, Norikazu}, issue = {11}, journal = {CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY}, month = {Nov}, note = {Autoimmune pancreatitis is a unique disease, characterized by lymphoplasmacytic inflammation in the acute stages. However, the active clinical features are unlikely to persist for long periods. Through long-term follow-up, we investigated the disease course in 51 patients with autoimmune pancreatitis. We found recurrence in 21 (41%) patients and pancreatic stone formation in 9 (18%) patients. Pancreatic stone formation was significantly more frequent in the recurrence group (7/21, 33%), compared with the nonrecurrence group (2/30, 7%). Moreover, we found high serum immunoglobulin G4 concentrations in 13 of 175 (7.4%) patients with ordinary chronic pancreatitis. This suggested that pancreatic stone formation is closely associated with recurrence and that autoimmune pancreatitis might transform into ordinary chronic pancreatitis after several recurrences. We found that the immune complex level, with a cutoff value of 10 mu g/dL, served as a good predictor of recurrence, with high sensitivity (61.9%), specificity (70.0%), and efficacy (66.7%). We also confirmed that HLA and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4 polymorphisms were useful predictors for AIP recurrence., Article, CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY}, pages = {S18--S22}, title = {Long-Term Follow-Up of Autoimmune Pancreatitis: Characteristics of Chronic Disease and Recurrence}, volume = {7}, year = {2009} }