• Respiratory medicine · Oct 2005

    Exhaled breath condensate cytokine patterns in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

    • Christian Gessner, Robert Scheibe, Michael Wötzel, Stefan Hammerschmidt, Hartmut Kuhn, Lothar Engelmann, Gerhard Hoheisel, Adrian Gillissen, Ulrich Sack, and Hubert Wirtz.
    • Department of Respiratory Medicine, University of Leipzig, Johannisallee 32, 04103 Leipzig, Germany. ch.gessner@web.de
    • Respir Med. 2005 Oct 1;99(10):1229-40.

    AbstractDifferences in cytokine patterns in stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), exacerbated COPD, smokers without apparent COPD, and healthy volunteers should be of interest for pathophysiological and therapeutic reasons. Methods including lavage, biopsy and sputum have been employed to investigate cytokines in the lung. For asystematic comparison, exhaled breath condensate (EBC) appears to be well suited. We investigated healthy volunteers, smokers without apparent COPD, stable and exacerbated COPD patients (+/- inhalative steroids) and finally those whose exacerbation made mechanical ventilation inevitable, for a more complete picture of inflammatory cytokines in COPD. We chose EBC because it is non-invasive and can be used repeatedly in spontaneous breathing individuals and during mechanical ventilation. EBC cytokines (IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-12 p 70, TNF-alpha) were assayed from a single sample using a multiplex array test kit. We observed a significant increase of all cytokines in acute exacerbation compared to stable COPD, smokers, and volunteers. Stable COPD and volunteers exhibited only small differences in cytokine pattern with respect to IL-1 beta and IL-12 (P<0.01). Smokers had increased levels of all investigated cytokines (P<0.01) compared to non-smokers and, with the exception of IL-1 beta, to stable COPD. Inhaled steroids resulted in reduced levels of IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, and IL-12 (all: P<0.01) in stable COPD (all: ex-smokers) with dose dependency for IL-8, IL-1 beta and IL-12. EBC analysis successfully characterized important differences in stable COPD compared to exacerbation or smoking and non-smoking healthy individuals.

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