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IL-7 serum levels and lymphopenia in hemodialysis patients, non-responders to recombinant human erythropoietin therapy
Publication . Costa, Elísio; Lima, Margarida; Rocha, Susana; Rocha-Pereira, Petronila; Castro, Elisabeth; Miranda, Vasco; Sameiro-Faria, Maria; Loureiro, Alfredo; Quintanilha, Alexandre; Belo, Luís; Santos-Silva, Alice
Inflammation, T-Cell phenotype, and inflammatory cytokines in chronic kidney disease patients under hemodialysis and its relationship to resistance to recombinant human erythropoietin therapy
Publication . Costa, Elísio; Lima, Margarida; Alves, João Moura; Rocha, Susana; Rocha-Pereira, Petronila; Castro, Elisabeth; Miranda, Vasco; Faria, Maria Sameiro; Loureiro, Alfredo; Quintanilha, Alexandre; Belo, Luís; Santos-Silva, Alice
Background Resistance to recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEPO) occurs in some chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients, which may be due to enhanced systemic inflammatory
response and to the erythropoiesis-suppressing effect of pro-inflammatory cytokines, some of which are produced by T cells.
Aim of study The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between resistance to rhEPO therapy in
hemodialysis CKD patients and inflammatory markers [Creactive protein (CRP), soluble interleukin (IL)-2 receptor(sIL2R), and serum albumin levels], blood cell counts, Tcell phenotype, cytokine production by T cells, and serum cytokine levels.
Materials and Methods We studied 50 hemodialysis CKD patients, 25 responders and 25 nonresponders to rhEPO, and compared them to each other and with 25 healthy
controls. When compared to controls, CKD patients showed increased serum levels of CRP, IL-6, and sIL2R and a T-cell lymphopenia, due to decreased numbers of
both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. T cells from CKD patients had an immunophenotype compatible with chronic T-cell stimulation as shown by the increased percentage of CD28−, CD57+, HLA-DR+, CD28−HLA-DR+, and CD57+ HLA-DR+ T cells and produce higher levels of IL-2, INF-γ, and TNF-α after short-term in vitro stimulation, although Th1 cytokines were not detectable in serum. Statistically
significant differences were found between responders and nonresponders to rhEPO therapy for total lymphocyte and CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts, albumin (lower in nonresponders) and CRP (higher in nonresponders) levels.
Conclusion CKD patients under hemodialysis present with raised inflammatory markers and decrease of total lymphocyte and CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts when compared with controls. Some of those markers are even further enhanced in nonresponders to rhEPO therapy patients, but resistance to this therapy cannot be justified by a Th1 polarized T-cell response.
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Funding agency
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
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SFRH
Funding Award Number
SFRH/BD/27688/2006