FC 099DECLINING PERITONEAL HOST DEFENCES REVEALED BY EX-VIVO CYTOKINE RELEASE ASSAY OF PERITONEAL DIALYSIS EFFLUENT CELLS

Autor: Lisa Daniel-Fischer, Klaus Kratochwill, Christoph Aufricht, Rebecca Herzog, Isabel J. Sobieszek
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Zdroj: Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation. 36
ISSN: 1460-2385
0931-0509
DOI: 10.1093/ndt/gfab141.002
Popis: Background and Aims Infectious complications occur in a significant proportion of PD patients, limiting long-term applicability. Reduced peritoneal immune-competence, caused by the continuous exposure to PD-fluids, has been described as a therapy-related pathomechanisms, prompting the need for a tool to assess the functional peritoneal immune status. We established an ex-vivo stimulation assay to test host defence mechanisms in only 9ml of PD-effluent. The aim of this study was to analyse basal inflammation and immune-competence in the general PD population at routine conditions to evaluate the assay as surrogate parameter of immune competence and linking it to PD vintage and clinical outcome parameters. Method 147 of 284 (51.8%) adult and paediatric PD patients treated between April 2013 and September 2020 at the local Department of Nephrology were included in the analysis. The study was approved by the local ethics committee and was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. Patients were exclusively treated with neutral pH/multi-chamber PD fluids during the glucose dwells. The majority of the 558 included PD-effluent samples were obtained during standard 4-hours peritoneal equilibration tests (PET) with 3.86% glucose containing PDF. Samples from the pre-PET dwell and at PET time points 1-hour and 4-hours were collected and immediately processed. Additional effluent samples were obtained during unscheduled hospitalization and in the event of an acute peritonitis. Effluent samples were collected directly from the drainage bags into standard 9 ml additive-free sample tubes. For ex-vivo stimulation, 100 ng/ml toll-like receptor (TLR) 4 agonist LPS and TLR2 agonist Pam3Cys were added to the effluent in the 9 ml collection tubes in duplicates and incubated at 37°C for 24h. Unstimulated samples kept in parallel were used as controls. IL-6 and TNF-α concentrations were measured with ELISA in the supernatants. Results Ex-vivo stimulation of peritoneal cells significantly increased the IL-6 and TNF-α release compared to unstimulated controls and resulted in a dwell-time dependent increase, with a significant lower cytokine released at the 1h PET time point. To assess local inflammation IL-6 levels of crude effluent were determined. IL-6 concentrations remained stable over time on PD. Interestingly, we were able to show higher IL-6 levels in CAPD patients in comparison to APD. As chronic exposure to PD-fluids has been shown to dampen the peritoneal immune competence, consecutive peritoneal effluent bags, obtained from patients were analysed. In this subcohort of 183 4h-PET effluents we found a decline in cytokine secretion with time on PD (IL-6 r=-0.27, p=0.00015, TNFa r=-0.25, p=0.00071). In a subgroup the ex-vivo cytokine release of effluent samples from patients with an acute peritonitis was assessed. IL-6 levels of acute peritonitis effluent samples did not differ from the stimulated IL-6 levels of effluent samples without acute peritonitis (2.45 pg/mL vs 2.31 pg/mL, p=0.85, t-test) suggesting that the assay seemingly represents the in-vivo host-defence cytokine release accurately. Conclusion The study provides evidence of a correlation of declining local host defence and duration of PD-therapy. It supports the hypothesis of PD duration-dependent progressive impairment of the ability of the peritoneal immune cells to secrete cytokines in response to a pathogenic stimulus and thereby dampening the global peritoneal immuno-competence. This suggests the utility of this clinically feasible ex-vivo induced cytokine-release assay in peritoneal effluent as a surrogate of the functional peritoneal immune competence. Future analyses need to evaluate the assay as a tool to predict common clinical outcomes and define reference values to facilitate stratification of patient populations, clinical staging and to guide novel therapeutic interventions.
Databáze: OpenAIRE