Chinese Journal of Lung Cancer (Feb 2011)
Correlation between Chlamydia Pneumoniae IgG Positive in Lung Cancer Patients and Cytokines Related to Radiation-induced Pulmonary Lesion
Abstract
Background and objective There exsits intimate relationship between infection with chlamydia pneumoniae (Cpn) and lung cancer incidence. But few studies have been reported about radiation-induced pulmonary lesion in lung cancer patients infected with Cpn. The aim of this study is to explore the correlation between cytokines related to radiation-induced pulmonary lesion and Cpn IgG positive in lung cancer patients. Methods A total of 69 patients with lung cancer received chest radiotherapy. Blood samples were collected and frozen before radiotherapy (pre-RT), middle radiotherapy (mid-RT) and after radiotherapy (post-RT). Cpn IgG and levels of IL-1β, SP-A, TGF-β, and TNF-α were measured by enzymelinked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Results In the total of 69 patients, 21 patients were Cpn IgG positive, 48 patients negative. The positive rate was 30.43%. In mid-RT concentration of IL-1β in Cpn IgG positive and negative group were (35.82±10.09) ng/L and (30.01±6.46) ng/L, with statistically significant difference (P < 0.05). Pre-RT and post-RT concentrations of IL-1β in Cpn IgG positive and negative group had no statistically significant difference. Mid-RT concentrations of SP-A in Cpn IgG positive group and negative group were (641.78±106.81) ng/L and (100.86±61.4) ng/L respectively, with statistically significant difference (P < 0.05). Post-RT concentration of SP-A in Cpn IgG positive and negative group were (657.47±115.19) ng/L and (93.23±47.15) ng/L respectively, with statistically significant difference (P < 0.05). Concentrations of TNF-α in Cpn IgG positive and negative group had no statistically significant difference. Concentrations of TGF-β in Cpn IgG positive group were (710.67±358.16) pg/mL in pre-RT, (1,002.06±542.16) pg/mL in mid-RT, (2,125.16±1,522.29) pg/mL in post-RT; those in negative group were (867.77±412.48) pg/mL, (914.05±425.70) pg/mL, (1,073.36±896.01) pg/mL. Concentration of TGF-β in post-RT between Cpn IgG positive and negative group had statistically significant difference (P < 0.05). Conclusion Cpn IgG positive in lung cancer patients influenced levels of IL-1β, SP-A, TGF-β during chest radiotherapy. This might aggravate radiation-induced pulmonary lesion.