4.7 Article

Synovial tissue hypoxia and inflammation in vivo

Journal

ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES
Volume 69, Issue 7, Pages 1389-1395

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/ard.2009.119776

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Funding

  1. Health Research Board of Ireland

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Introduction Hypoxia is a microenvironmental feature in the inflamed joint, which promotes survival advantage for cells. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship of partial oxygen pressure in the synovial tissue (tPO(2)) in patients with inflammatory arthritis with macroscopic/microscopic inflammation and local levels of proinflammatory mediators. Methods Patients with inflammatory arthritis underwent full clinical assessment and video arthroscopy to quantify macroscopic synovitis and measure synovial tPO(2) under direct visualisation. Cell specifi c markers (CD3 (T-2 cells), CD68 (macrophages), Ki67 (cell proliferation) and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labelling (cell apoptosis)) were quantified by immunohistology. In vitro migration was assessed in primary and normal synoviocytes (synovial fibroblast cells (SFCs)) using a wound repair scratch assay. Levels of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha), interleukin 1 beta (IL1 beta), interferon gamma (IFN gamma), IL6, macrophage inflammatory protein 3 alpha (MIP3 alpha) and IL8 were quantified, in matched serum and synovial fluid, by multiplex cytokine assay and ELISA. Results The tPO(2) was 22.5 (range 3.2-54.1) mm Hg and correlated inversely with macroscopic synovitis (r=-0.421, p=0.02), sublining CD3 cells (-0.611, p<0.01) and sublining CD68 cells (r=-0.615, p<0.001). No relationship with cell proliferation or apoptosis was found. Primary and normal SFCs exposed to 1% and 3% oxygen (reflecting the median tPO2 in vivo) induced cell migration. This was coupled with significantly higher levels of synovial fluid tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha), IL1 beta, IFN gamma and MIP3 alpha in patients with tPO(2) < 20 mm Hg (all p values < 0.05). Conclusions This is the first study to show a direct in vivo correlation between synovial tPO(2), inflammation and cell migration, thus it is proposed that hypoxia is a possible primary driver of inflammatory processes in the arthritic joint.

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