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The association between treatment and systemic inflammation in acromegaly.

Title: The association between treatment and systemic inflammation in acromegaly.
Authors: Wolters, TLC; van der Heijden, CDCC; Pinzariu, O; Hijmans-Kersten, BTP; Jacobs, C; Kaffa, C; Hoischen, A; Netea, MG; Smit, JWA; Thijssen, DHJ; Georgescu, CE; Riksen, NP; Netea-Maier, RT
Publisher Information: Elsevier
Publication Year: 2021
Collection: Liverpool John Moores University: LJMU Research Online
Subject Terms: QH301 Biology; R Medicine (General)
Description: OBJECTIVE: Acromegaly is characterized by an excess of growth hormone (GH) and insulin like growth-factor 1 (IGF1), and it is strongly associated with cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Both acute and long-lasting pro-inflammatory effects have been attributed to IGF1. Previous results suggest the presence of systemic inflammation in treated patients. Here we assessed the association between treatment of acromegaly, systemic inflammation and vascular function. DESIGN: Ex vivo cytokine production and circulating inflammatory markers were assessed in peripheral blood from treated and untreated acromegaly patients (N = 120), and compared them with healthy controls. A more comprehensive prospective inflammatory and vascular assessment was conducted in a subgroup of six treatment-naive patients with follow-up during treatment. RESULTS: Circulating concentrations of VCAM1, E-selectin and MMP2 were higher in patients with uncontrolled disease, whereas the concentrations of IL18 were lower. In stimulated whole blood, cytokine production was skewed towards a more pro-inflammatory profile in patients, especially those with untreated disease. Prospective vascular measurements in untreated patients showed improvement of endothelial function during treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Acromegaly patients are characterized by a pro-inflammatory phenotype, most pronounced in those with uncontrolled disease. Treatment only partially reverses this pro-inflammatory bias. These findings suggest that systemic inflammation could contribute to the increased risk of CVD in acromegaly patients.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: text
Language: English
ISSN: 1096-6374
Relation: https://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/14970/4/The%20association%20between%20treatment%20and%20systemic%20inflammation%20in%20acromegaly.pdf; Wolters, TLC, van der Heijden, CDCC, Pinzariu, O, Hijmans-Kersten, BTP, Jacobs, C, Kaffa, C, Hoischen, A, Netea, MG, Smit, JWA, Thijssen, DHJ, Georgescu, CE, Riksen, NP and Netea-Maier, RT (2021) The association between treatment and systemic inflammation in acromegaly. Growth Hormone and IGF Research, 57-58. ISSN 1096-6374
DOI: 10.1016/j.ghir.2021.101391
Availability: https://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/14970/; https://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/14970/4/The%20association%20between%20treatment%20and%20systemic%20inflammation%20in%20acromegaly.pdf; https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ghir.2021.101391
Rights: cc_by
Accession Number: edsbas.8C1D93B0
Database: BASE