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Systemic cytokines are elevated in a subset of patients with irritable bowel syndrome but largely unrelated to symptom characteristics
Author(s) -
Bennet S. M. P.,
Palsson O.,
Whitehead W. E.,
Barrow D. A.,
Törnblom H.,
Öhman L.,
Simrén M.,
Tilburg M. A. L.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
neurogastroenterology and motility
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.489
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1365-2982
pISSN - 1350-1925
DOI - 10.1111/nmo.13378
Subject(s) - irritable bowel syndrome , medicine , cytokine , immune system , gastroenterology , multivariate analysis , tumor necrosis factor alpha , interleukin 6 , interleukin , immunology
Background Serum levels of pro‐inflammatory cytokines tend to be increased in irritable bowel syndrome ( IBS ) patients, or subgroups thereof. Still, the link between cytokine levels and IBS symptoms is unclear. We aim to determine systemic cytokine levels in IBS patients and healthy subjects ( HS ), confirm the presence of a subset of patients with an increased immune activity and to establish if cytokines are linked to IBS symptoms and pathophysiological factors. Methods Serum levels of interleukin ( IL )‐1β, IL ‐6, IL ‐8, tumor necrosis factor ( TNF ), and IL ‐10 were measured. All subjects reported IBS symptoms using validated questionnaires and underwent colonic sensorimotor testing. Multivariate supervised orthogonal partial least squares‐discriminant analysis ( OPLS ‐ DA ) and unsupervised principal component analysis (PCA) and hierarchical cluster analysis ( HCA ) were implemented. Key Results Irritable bowel syndrome patients (n = 246) had higher serum levels of IL ‐1β, IL ‐6, IL ‐8, TNF , and IL ‐10 compared to HS (n = 21); however, serum cytokine profiles could not discriminate patients from HS . Moreover, cytokine levels were not correlated with symptoms among patients. Supervised OPLS ‐ DA identified 104 patients (40% of patients) and unsupervised HCA analysis identified 49 patients (20%) with an increased immune activity indicated by elevated levels of serum cytokines compared to HS and the other patients. However, irrespective of how patients with increased immune activity were identified they were symptomatically similar to patients with no indication of increased immune activity. Conclusions & Inferences Serum cytokines are elevated in IBS patients compared to HS . Immune activation characterizes a subset of patients, but modest associations between cytokine profile and symptoms suggest immune activity does not directly influence symptoms in IBS .