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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 Nov 1.
Published in final edited form as: Am J Surg Pathol. 2017 Nov;41(11):1491–1498. doi: 10.1097/PAS.0000000000000939

Table 1.

Definitions and classifications of histological changes

Definitions
Acute and Chronic Inflammation Grades
I No acute inflammation and no increased chronic inflammation
II Chronic inflammation only
III Acute inflammation including acute cryptitis - no abscesses
IV Acute crypt abscesses in ≤ 10 % of crypts
V Acute crypt abscesses in > 10 % of crypts
Eosinophilic Inflammation Grades
1 None or ≤ 32 eosinophils/hpf
2 Peak eosinophil count > 32/hpf but without epithelial invasion (< 2 eosinophils in surface epithelium/hpf, < 9 eosinophils in crypt epithelium/hpf)
3 Eosinophilic cryptitis (>9 intraepithelial eosinophils /hpf)
4 Few eosinophil crypt abscesses (≤ 10% of crypts)
5 Many eosinophil crypt abscesses (> 10% of crypts)
Chronic Architectural and Non-architectural Changes (present or absent)
Ulcer/Erosion Absence of surface epithelium with granulation tissue (ulcer) or disrupted/absent surface epithelium with fibrin deposits (erosion)
Crypt distortion/atrophy Crypt abnormalities including elongated crypts, branched crypts, atrophic crypts
Surface villiform changes Villiform changes at the surface
Basal plasmacytosis Aggregates of plasma cells below crypts and above the muscularis mucosa
Basal lymphoid aggregates Aggregates of lymphocytes below crypts and above the muscularis mucosa
Paneth cell metaplasia Paneth-like cells in crypt epithelium
Granuloma Sarcoid-like granulomas in uninflamed areas (pericryptal granulomas in areas of damaged/inflamed crypts were permitted)