Dynamic Soluble IL-6R/Soluble gp130 Ratio as a Potential Indicator for the Prostate Malignancy Phenotype-A Multicenter Case-Control Study.

IL-6 signaling acute phase reaction inflammation microenvironment oxidative stress prostate tumors

Journal

Journal of personalized medicine
ISSN: 2075-4426
Titre abrégé: J Pers Med
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101602269

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
28 Sep 2024
Historique:
received: 16 08 2024
revised: 12 09 2024
accepted: 26 09 2024
medline: 25 10 2024
pubmed: 25 10 2024
entrez: 25 10 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Prostate tumors, if prostate cancer or adenoma, represent a major public health challenge. Progress in research on inflammation has revealed a connection between inflammation, immunity, and cancer. In this context, this study aimed to find IL-6 signaling systemic abnormalities in the inflammatory tumor microenvironment. This study was case-controlled, multicentered, and included 86 patients, 43 diagnosed with BPH and 43 diagnosed with PCa, between January 2019 and January 2020. The study group was homogenous and the studied parameters were IL-6 complex (IL-6, soluble receptor IL-6R, soluble glycoprotein gp130), acute phase proteins (C reactive protein-CRP, acid alpha1 glycoprotein-AGPA, ferritin, albumin, transferrin), and oxidative stress-associated variables (malondialdehyde-MDA, carbonylated protein-PCO, 8-hydroxy-deoxy guanosine-8-OHdG, total antioxidant status-bTAS). The inflammatory microenvironment determined IL-6 signaling alterations (over-regulation of sIL-6R and suppression of sgp130 in PCa versus BPH), changes in acute phase reaction markers (increased serum levels of CRP, AGPA, ferritin, and decreased serum levels of albumin, transferrin) that were much more evident in PCa compared to BPH, an imbalance between macromolecular oxidative damage (MDA, PCO, 8-OHdG) and endogenous antioxidants (TAS) that was more accentuated in PCa compared with BPH, and a representative association between the sIL-6R/sgp130 ratio and inflammatory/oxidative stress-related factors only in PCa patients. Our study reconfirms the anterior concept that IL-6 promotes prostatic tumorigenesis. In this study, we first demonstrated that a high sIL-6R/sgp130 ratio facilitates prostate malignancy.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39452544
pii: jpm14101037
doi: 10.3390/jpm14101037
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Auteurs

Cosmin-Victor Ene (CV)

Department of Urology, 'Carol Davila' University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 050474 Bucharest, Romania.
Department of Urology, "Saint John" Clinical Emergency Hospital, 042122 Bucharest, Romania.

Bogdan Geavlete (B)

Department of Urology, 'Carol Davila' University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 050474 Bucharest, Romania.
Department of Urology, "Saint John" Clinical Emergency Hospital, 042122 Bucharest, Romania.

Cristian Mares (C)

Department of Urology, 'Carol Davila' University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 050474 Bucharest, Romania.
Department of Urology, "Saint John" Clinical Emergency Hospital, 042122 Bucharest, Romania.

Ilinca Nicolae (I)

Department of Research, 'Victor Babes' Clinical Hospital for Infectious Diseases, 030303 Bucharest, Romania.

Corina Daniela Ene (CD)

Department of Nephrology, 'Carol Davila' Nephrology Hospital, 010731 Bucharest, Romania.
Department of Nephrology, 'Carol Davila' University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 020021 Bucharest, Romania.

Classifications MeSH