Litcius/Paper detail

Interleukin polymorphisms and protein levels associated with lung cancer susceptibility and phenotypes

Kaiyue Ding, Minhan Yi, Linsen Li, Yuan Zhang

2021Expert Review of Clinical Immunology14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Background We conducted a comprehensive analysis to explore whether multiple interleukin (IL), IL-1β, IL-4, IL-6, IL-8 and IL-10, polymorphisms and IL proteins (IL-6, IL-10) relate to lung cancer (LC) susceptibility or clinical characteristics.Methods We performed the standard meta-analysis procedures according to PRISMA. The odds ratio (OR) and mean difference (MD) were used for analysis.Results We investigated 11 variants from 43 articles, and found that IL-1β rs16944 (p = 0.04) and IL-10 rs1800872 (p = 0.003) decreased while IL-10 rs1800896 (p = 0.007) increased LC risks. We also found that IL-1β rs1143627 decreased NSCLC risks (p = 0.03). The heterozygotes and homozygotes contributed differently. In addition, another 15 articles were involved to explore the relationship between IL proteins and LC. We found that LC patients accounted for higher serum IL-6 of 16.60 pg/mL (p < 0.00001) and higher serum IL-10 of 3.47 pg/mL (p = 0.02) than that of controls. Furthermore, IIIA-Ⅳ LC patients tended to have higher proportion of positive IL-6 staining in lung tumor tissue in contrast with IA-IIB patients by TNM stage (p = 0.0002).Conclusions Four variants from IL-1β and IL-10, and serum IL-6 and IL-10 levels are associated with LC risks.

Topics & Concepts

Lung cancerOdds ratioInternal medicineMedicineInterleukinOncologyHeterozygote advantageGastroenterologyLungImmunologyGenotypeCytokineBiologyGeneGeneticsCytokine Signaling Pathways and InteractionsChemokine receptors and signalingImmune cells in cancer