학술논문

Immune Reactivity Is More Suppressed in Patients with Alcoholic Liver Disease than in Patients with Virus-Induced Cirrhosis after CRH Stimulation
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research. Jan 01, 2006 30(1):140-149
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0145-6008
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The most frequent diagnoses for liver transplantation are virus-induced cirrhosis (VIC) and alcoholic liver disease (ALD), after an abstinence period of at least 6 months. Chronic ethanol consumption has been linked to an abnormal neuroendocrine-immune axis and to an altered surgical stress response inducing an increased infection rate. Preoperative stress testing might be relevant to detect stress-induced immune alteration. The aim of this study was to investigate the preoperative stress-like response to corticotrophin-releasing-hormone challenge (CRH) of patients with ALD compared with patients with VIC and their immune sequelae. METHODS: Nine patients with ALD and 8 patients with VIC were included in this clinical study prior to transplantation. All patients received CRH in the morning. Blood samples were drawn before and after stress testing. RESULTS: In response to CRH, the ALD patients showed a significant decrease in the plasma interleukin (IL)-6/IL-10 ratio. After lipopolysaccharide stimulation of whole blood from CRH-challenged ALD patients, IL-10 increased significantly. The cytotoxic T1-(Tc1) to cytotoxic T2 (Tc2) ratio was significantly decreased in ALD patients after the stress test. Infections occurred significantly more often in ALD patients within the past year before study inclusion. CONCLUSIONS: ALD patients showed a stronger anti-inflammatory immune status and response than VIC patients. This difference was associated with a higher infection rate despite a median alcohol abstinence time of 3.5 years. Although an altered immune response is well known among patients with actual alcohol-use disorders, to the best of our knowledge, it is not described in patients after such a long abstinence time.