The tryptophan kynurenine pathway, neopterin and IL-6 during vulvectomy and abdominal hysterectomy

Jaap Willem Hol*, Robert J. Stolker, Markus Klimek, Dirk L. Stronks, Durk Fekkes

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Surgery has wide ranging immunomodulatory properties of which the mechanism is poorly understood. In order to investigate how different types of surgery influence inflammation, we designed a longitudinal observational study investigating two inflammatory profiles of two separate patient groups undergoing gynaecological operations of differing severity. In addition to measuring the well known inflammatory markers neopterin and IL-6, we also determined the kynurenine/tryptophan ratio. This study was a prospective, single center, two-armed observational study involving 28 female patients. Plasma levels of tryptophan, kynurenine, neopterin and IL-6 were determined from samples taken at: 24hrs pre-operative, prior to induction, ten minutes before the operation was expected to end, and at 24 and 96 hours post operative in patients undergoing abdominal hysterectomy and vulvectomy. Results: There were 15 and 13 patients included in the vulvectomy and abdominal hysterectomy groups, respectively. In this study we show that anesthesia and surgery significantly increases the enzyme activity of indoleamine 2, 3 dioxygenase (IDO) as measured by the kynurenine/tryptophan ratio (P=0.003), while maintaining stable neopterin levels. However, abdominal hysterectomy causes a considerable IL-6 increase (P<0.001). Conclusion: Surgery and associated anesthesia cause a significant tryptophan level decrease while significantly increasing IDO activity. Both types of surgery produce nearly identical neopterin time curve relationships, with no significant change occurring in either group. However, even though neopterin is unaffected by the severity of surgery, IL-6 responded to surgical invasiveness by revealing a significant increase during abdominal hysterectomy.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102
JournalJournal of Biomedical Science
Volume21
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The authors wish to thank Claudia Heijmans-Antonissen, Freek Zijlstra, Ans Voskuilen-Kooyman and Marieke van der Heide-Mulder for their skilled technical and methodological assistance. Project is funded by department research budget.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Hol et al.; licensee.

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