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Effect of in vitro aspirin stimulation on basophils in patients with aspirin‐exacerbated respiratory disease
Author(s) -
Çelik G. E.,
Schroeder J. T.,
Hamilton R. G.,
Saini S. S.,
Adkinson N. F.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
clinical and experimental allergy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.462
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 1365-2222
pISSN - 0954-7894
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2222.2009.03277.x
Subject(s) - basophil activation , aspirin , basophil , histamine , cd63 , leukotriene , immunology , medicine , pharmacology , flow cytometry , immunoglobulin e , chemistry , asthma , antibody , biochemistry , microrna , microvesicles , gene
Summary Background Basophil activation has been implicated in the pathogenesis of aspirin‐exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD). However, a comprehensive analysis of basophil responses to aspirin in terms of mediator release, cytokine secretion and increased expression of surface activation markers has not been performed. Objective To study the in vitro effects of aspirin on the concurrent release of histamine, leukotriene C 4 (LTC 4 ) and IL‐4 from human basophils and to also evaluate changes in surface activation markers (CD63, CD69 and CD203c) expressed by these cells. Methods Basophil‐enriched cell suspensions from 10 patients with AERD and 10 healthy volunteers were incubated with lysine‐aspirin for up to 3 h. Cells were analysed for expression of CD63, CD69 and CD203c using flow cytometry. Cell‐free supernatants were evaluated for histamine, and LTC 4 release and for IL‐4 secretion. Results Aspirin‐induced expression of CD63, CD69 and CD203c yielded 30%, 80% and 70% sensitivity, respectively, but with poor specificity. There was no significant difference in LTC 4 synthesis between groups. None of the patients with AERD (or controls) released IL‐4 in response to aspirin. A higher dose of 5 mg/mL aspirin‐mediated non‐specific effects on basophils. Conclusion Basophil responses to in vitro aspirin challenge are poor indicators of clinical sensitivity. Aspirin activates some basophils by means of mechanisms that differ from the classical IgE‐mediated pathway. Our study also shows that the use of 27 m m of aspirin (5 mg/mL) by previous investigators causes non‐specific basophil activation, thereby eliminating its usefulness in a cell‐based diagnostic test for AERD. Evaluation of in vitro basophil activation has low clinical value in identifying aspirin‐induced respiratory reactions.