4.7 Article

Race and gender variation in response to evoked inflammation

Journal

JOURNAL OF TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-11-63

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health [UL1TR000003]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health [UL1TR000003]
  3. NIH-NHLBI SCCOR Project [P50-HL-083799]
  4. American Heart Association [12POST11840017]
  5. [RO1-HL-111694]
  6. [RO1-HL-113147]
  7. [RO1-DK-090505]
  8. [UO1-HL-108636]
  9. [K24-HL-107643]

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Background: Race- and gender-variation in innate immunity may contribute to demographic differences in inflammatory and cardiometabolic disease; yet their influence on dynamic responses during inflammatory stress is poorly understood. Our objective was to examine race and gender influence on the response to experimental endotoxemia. Methods: The Genetics of Evoked Responses to Niacin and Endotoxemia (GENE) study was designed to investigate regulation of inflammatory and metabolic responses during low-grade endotoxemia (LPS 1 ng/kg intravenously) in healthy individuals (median age 24, IQR=7) of European (EA; n=193, 47% female) and African ancestry (AA; n=101, 59% female). Results: Baseline clinical, metabolic, and inflammatory biomarkers by race and gender were consistent with epidemiological literature; pre-LPS cytokines (e.g. median (IQR) IL-6, 2.7 (2) vs. 2.1 (2) pg/ml, P=0.001) were higher in AA than EA. In contrast, acute cytokine responses during endotoxemia were lower in AA than EA (e.g. median (IQR) peak IL-1RA, 30 (38) vs. 43 (45) ng/ml P=0.002) as was the induction of hepatic acute-phase proteins (e.g. median (IQR) peak CRP 12.9 (9) vs. 17.4 (12) mg/L P=0.005). Further, baseline levels of cytokines were only weakly correlated with peak inflammatory responses (all r(s) <0.2) both in AA and in EA. There were less pronounced and less consistent differences in the response by gender, with males having a higher AUC for CRP response compared to females (median (IQR) AUC: 185 (112) vs. 155 (118), P=0.02). Conclusions: We observed lower levels of evoked inflammation in response to endotoxin in AA compared with EA, despite similar or higher baseline levels of inflammatory markers in AA. Our data also suggest that levels of inflammatory biomarkers measured in epidemiological settings might not predict the degree of acute stress-response or risk of diseases characterized by activation of innate immunity.

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