Diseases (Jan 2024)

B Cells and Double-Negative B Cells (CD27<sup>−</sup>IgD<sup>−</sup>) Are Related to Acute Pancreatitis Severity

  • Filipa Malheiro,
  • Miguel Ângelo-Dias,
  • Teresa Lopes,
  • Sofia Azeredo-Lopes,
  • Catarina Martins,
  • Luis Miguel Borrego

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases12010018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 18

Abstract

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Acute pancreatitis (AP) is an increasingly frequent disease in which inflammation plays a crucial role. Fifty patients hospitalized with AP were included and peripheral blood samples were analyzed for B and T cell subpopulations at the time of hospitalization and 48 h after diagnosis. The Bedside Index of Severity in Acute Pancreatitis (BISAP) and length of hospital stay were also recorded. A healthy control (HC) group of 15 outpatients was included. AP patients showed higher neutrophil/lymphocyte (N/L) ratios and higher percentages of B cells than the HC group. The total B cell percentages were higher in patients with moderate/severe AP than in patients with mild AP. The percentages of B cells as well as the percentages of the CD27−IgD− B cell subset decreased from admission to 48 h after admission. The patients with higher BISAP scores showed lower percentages of peripheral lymphocytes but higher percentages of CD27−IgD− B cells. Higher BISAP scores, N/L ratios, and peripheral blood B cell levels emerged as predictors of hospital stay length in AP patients. Our findings underscore the importance of early markers for disease severity. Additionally, the N/L ratio along with the BISAP score and circulating B cell levels form a robust predictive model for hospital stay duration of AP patients.

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