Original articles

Serum interleukin‑17 levels predict inflammatory activity in patients with autoimmune hepatitis

Krzysztof Gutkowski, Dorota Gutkowska, Jerzy Kiszka, Mariusz Partyka, Teresa Kacperek-Hartleb, Maciej Kajor, Marek Hartleb
Published online: January 24, 2018

INTRODUCTION    The etiology of autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is unclear, with molecular mimicry between host and viral/drug antigens being the most plausible mechanism initiating the immune cascade that induces hepatocyte injury. Finding a serologic parameter that closely relates to the liver histology would be beneficial for monitoring AIH activity and optimizing treatment.
OBJECTIVES    We studied serum interleukin (IL)-17 levels and IL‑17 activators (IL‑6 and transforming growth factor β1 [TGF-β1]) in treatment-naive and immunosuppressed patients with AIH. We also analyzed the relationships between these cytokines and histological inflammation scores.
PATIENTS AND METHODS    A total of 44 patients with confirmed AIH were enrolled to the study (22 treatment-naive patients and 22 patients in clinical remission after at least 3 years of immunosuppression). Liver biopsies were performed, and the histological grading of inflammatory activity was performed by a single pathologist. The control group comprised 30 healthy age- and sex‑matched subjects. Serum IL‑17, IL‑6, and TGF‑β1 levels were measured by a quantitative sandwich enzyme immunoassay.
RESULTS    Serum IL‑17, IL‑6, and TGF‑β1 levels were higher in treatment-naive patients compared with controls (23.2 pg/ml vs 15.3 pg/ml, P = 0.0001; 5.20 pg/ml vs 1.42 pg/ml, P = 0.0001; and 40.5 ng/ml vs 30.1 ng/ml, P = 0.04; respectively). In treatment-naive patients, serum IL‑17 negatively correlated with hepatic inflammation (r = –0.63, P = 0.01). A reduced serum IL‑17 concentration correlated with an increased TGF‑β1 concentration in patients in clinical remission (r = –0.51, P = 0.03).
CONCLUSIONS    Serum IL‑17 levels may be a useful parameter for assessing disease activity in patients with AIH.

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