Pancreas
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Severe acute pancreatitis (AP) is frequently associated with immune suppression, which increases the risk of infections, organ failure, and death. Our aims were to measure monocyte function (ie, HLA-DR expression and tumor necrosis factor-alpha [TNF-alpha] production as markers of immune suppression) in patients with severe AP and to determine whether treatment of blood samples with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and/or interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) corrected the functional defects of monocytes in vitro. ⋯ The proportion of HLA-DR-positive monocytes correlates with TNF-alpha production, and they both reflect the degree of immune suppression. The low proportion of HLA-DR-positive monocytes in AP can be reversed in vitro by GM-CSF and/or IFN-gamma. The GM-CSF and IFN-gamma treatments also increase LPS-induced TNF-alpha production. By the combination of GM-CSF and IFN-gamma, but not by either agent alone, LPS-induced TNF-alpha production of monocytes was equally high in patients and in controls.