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Sarcoidosis and tuberculosis cytokine profiles: indistinguishable in bronchoalveolar lavage but different in blood
Authors:Muhunthan Thillai  Christian Eberhardt  Alex M Lewin  Lee Potiphar  Suzie Hingley-Wilson  Saranya Sridhar  Jonathan Macintyre  Onn Min Kon  Melissa Wickremasinghe  Athol Wells  Mark E Weeks  Donald Mitchell  Ajit Lalvani
Institution:Department of Respiratory Medicine, National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
Abstract:

Background

The clinical, radiological and pathological similarities between sarcoidosis and tuberculosis can make disease differentiation challenging. A complicating factor is that some cases of sarcoidosis may be initiated by mycobacteria. We hypothesised that immunological profiling might provide insight into a possible relationship between the diseases or allow us to distinguish between them.

Methods

We analysed bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid in sarcoidosis (n?=?18), tuberculosis (n?=?12) and healthy volunteers (n?=?16). We further investigated serum samples in the same groups; sarcoidosis (n?=?40), tuberculosis (n?=?15) and healthy volunteers (n?=?40). A cross-sectional analysis of multiple cytokine profiles was performed and data used to discriminate between samples.

Results

We found that BAL profiles were indistinguishable between both diseases and significantly different from healthy volunteers. In sera, tuberculosis patients had significantly lower levels of the Th2 cytokine interleukin-4 (IL-4) than those with sarcoidosis (p?=?0.004). Additional serum differences allowed us to create a linear regression model for disease differentiation (within-sample accuracy 91%, cross-validation accuracy 73%).

Conclusions

These data warrant replication in independent cohorts to further develop and validate a serum cytokine signature that may be able to distinguish sarcoidosis from tuberculosis. Systemic Th2 cytokine differences between sarcoidosis and tuberculosis may also underly different disease outcomes to similar respiratory stimuli.
Keywords:
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