Litcius/Paper detail

Peritoneal Fluid Cytokines Reveal New Insights of Endometriosis Subphenotypes

Jieliang Zhou, Bernard Su Min Chern, Peter Barton‐Smith, Jessie Wai Leng Phoon, Tse Yeun Tan, Véronique Viardot-Foucault, Chee Wai Ku, Heng Hao Tan, Jerry Kok Yen Chan, Yie Hou Lee

2020International Journal of Molecular Sciences62 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Endometriosis is a common inflammatory gynecological disorder which causes pelvic scarring, pain, and infertility, characterized by the implantation of endometrial-like lesions outside the uterus. The peritoneum, ovaries, and deep soft tissues are the commonly involved sites, and endometriotic lesions can be classified into three subphenotypes: superficial peritoneal endometriosis (PE), ovarian endometrioma (OE), and deep infiltrating endometriosis (DIE). In 132 women diagnosed laparoscopically with and without endometriosis (n = 73, 59 respectively), and stratified into PE, OE, and DIE, peritoneal fluids (PF) were characterized for 48 cytokines by using multiplex immunoassays. Partial-least-squares-regression analysis revealed distinct subphenotype cytokine signatures—a six-cytokine signature distinguishing PE from OE, a seven-cytokine signature distinguishing OE from DIE, and a six-cytokine-signature distinguishing PE from DIE—each associated with different patterns of biological processes, signaling events, and immunology. These signatures describe endometriosis better than disease stages (p < 0.0001). Pathway analysis revealed the association of ERK1 and 2, AKT, MAPK, and STAT4 linked to angiogenesis, cell proliferation, migration, and inflammation in the subphenotypes. These data shed new insights on the pathophysiology of endometriosis subphenotypes, with the potential to exploit the cytokine signatures to stratify endometriosis patients for targeted therapies and biomarker discovery.

Topics & Concepts

EndometriosisPelvic painMedicineCytokineInfertilityAngiogenesisPeritoneal fluidPathologyImmunologyInternal medicineBiologyPregnancyGeneticsRadiologyEndometriosis Research and TreatmentUterine Myomas and TreatmentsEndometrial and Cervical Cancer Treatments