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Comparison of cytokines in the peritoneal fluid and conditioned medium of adolescents and adults with and without endometriosis
Author(s) -
Bailey Amelia P.,
Hill Abby S.,
Beste Michael T.,
Cook Christi D.,
Sarda Vishnudas,
Laufer Marc R.,
Isaacson Keith B.,
Griffith Linda G.,
Missmer Stacey A.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
american journal of reproductive immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.071
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1600-0897
pISSN - 1046-7408
DOI - 10.1111/aji.13347
Subject(s) - endometriosis , peritoneal fluid , medicine , cytokine , physiology , gastroenterology
Problem To compare inflammatory‐ and immune‐associated peritoneal cytokines of adolescents and adults with and without endometriosis. Methods of study In a nested case‐control study in multiple university‐affiliated scientific centers, ten adolescents and thirteen adults with visually and histologically confirmed endometriosis (cases), thirteen adolescents with visually suspected endometriosis but indeterminate (seven patients) or negative (six patients) histology, and fifteen adults undergoing surgery for non‐malignant gynecologic disease without endometriosis (controls) underwent laparoscopic aspiration of peritoneal fluid (PF), from which PF and conditioned medium (CM) cytokine levels were assayed. Results Compared to adults with endometriosis, MCP‐3, IL‐12p40, MIP‐1β, and IL‐15 were significantly higher among adolescents with endometriosis, while TNF‐β and CTACK were lower among adolescents. These differences were similar comparing adolescents with endometriosis to adult controls except for MIP‐1β, which was not statistically different. MIP‐1β was, however, the only cytokine observed to differ between adult cases and controls. There were no significant differences in CM cytokines among the three groups. Results were similar when analyses were restricted to samples collected (a) during menstrual cycle days 1‐10, (b) from patients unexposed to exogenous hormones, or (c) from all adolescents despite presence or absence of histologic endometriosis. Conclusion Biologically relevant and statistically significant differences in six PF cytokines were observed and suggest a more pro‐invasion cytokine profile among adolescents with endometriosis. Adolescents with endometriosis have unique peritoneal cytokine profiles and molecular behavior when compared to adults with and without endometriosis.