Autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP) is a peculiar type of pancreatitis of presumed autoimmune etiology. Many new clinical aspects
of AIP have been clarified during the past 10 years, and AIP has become a distinct entity recognized worldwide. However, its
precise pathogenesis or pathophysiology remains unclear. As AIP dramatically responds to steroid therapy, accurate diagnosis
of AIP is necessary to avoid unnecessary surgery. Characteristic dense lymphoplasmacytic infiltration and fibrosis in the
pancreas may prove to be the gold standard for diagnosis of AIP. However, since it is difficult to obtain sufficient pancreatic
tissue, AIP should be diagnosed currently based on the characteristic radiological findings (irregular narrowing of the main
pancreatic duct and enlargement of the pancreas) in combination with serological findings (elevation of serum γ-globulin,
IgG, or IgG4, along with the presence of autoantibodies), clinical findings (elderly male preponderance, fluctuating obstructive
jaundice without pain, occasional extrapancreatic lesions, and favorable response to steroid therapy), and histopathological
findings (dense infiltration of IgG4-positive plasma cells and T lymphocytes with fibrosis and obliterative phlebitis in various
organs). It is apparent that elevation of serum IgG4 levels and infiltration of abundant IgG4-positive plasma cells into various
organs are rather specific to AIP patients. We propose a new clinicopathological entity, “IgG4-related sclerosing disease”
and suggest that AIP is a pancreatic lesion reflecting this systemic disease.
Key words autoimmune pancreatitis - IgG4 - chronic pancreatitis - sclerosing cholangitis - retroperitoneal fibrosis