Dinarello Charles A
Department of Medicine, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO 80262, USA.
Vaccine. 2003 Jun 1;21 Suppl 2:S24-34. doi: 10.1016/s0264-410x(03)00196-8.
In view of the increasing use of anti-cytokine-based therapies to treat autoimmune diseases, the role of specific cytokines in host defense against infection has become a highly relevant area of investigation. There are over 300,000 patients worldwide being treated with agents that specifically block the biological activities of interleukin-1 (IL-1) or tumor necrosis factor (TNF) for reducing the severity of autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease or psoriasis. Those patients receiving anti-TNF-alpha or IL-1 blocking therapies are treated on a chronic basis. Studies suggest that other chronic inflammatory diseases will benefit from anti-cytokine therapies. However, there is a growing body of clinical evidence that neutralization of TNF-alpha is associated with an increased risk of opportunistic infections, including mycobacterial diseases. Blockade of IL-1 activity with the IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) appears, at present, to be relatively safe. However, because of physician under reporting (some estimates of reporting being less than 5% of these infections), the true incidence of infections, both serious and non-serious, will remain unknown. Does the increase in infections associated with anti-cytokine-based therapies come as a surprise? Of the two components of host defense, the innate and the acquired responses, which are affected by anti-cytokine therapies? From a wealth of rodent studies using live infection models, the following conclusions can be drawn: (1) neutralization or gene deletion for TNF-alpha is frequently associated with reduction of host defense in models of live Gram-positive or Gram-negative infections as well as infection by intracellular microbes such as Salmonella and Listeria; (2) absence of the IL-1 receptor can also result in decreased resistance to Listeria or Gram-positive bacteria and (3) TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma are required for defense against infection caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
鉴于基于抗细胞因子的疗法在治疗自身免疫性疾病中的应用日益增加,特定细胞因子在宿主抗感染防御中的作用已成为一个高度相关的研究领域。全球有超过30万患者正在接受专门阻断白细胞介素-1(IL-1)或肿瘤坏死因子(TNF)生物活性的药物治疗,以减轻类风湿性关节炎、克罗恩病或牛皮癣等自身免疫性疾病的严重程度。那些接受抗TNF-α或IL-1阻断疗法的患者需要长期治疗。研究表明,其他慢性炎症性疾病也将从抗细胞因子疗法中获益。然而,越来越多的临床证据表明,TNF-α的中和与机会性感染风险增加有关,包括分枝杆菌病。目前,用IL-1受体拮抗剂(IL-1Ra)阻断IL-1活性似乎相对安全。然而,由于医生报告不足(一些感染报告估计不到这些感染的5%),严重和非严重感染的真实发生率仍将未知。基于抗细胞因子的疗法导致的感染增加令人惊讶吗?在宿主防御的两个组成部分,即先天反应和后天反应中,哪一个受到抗细胞因子疗法的影响?从大量使用活体感染模型的啮齿动物研究中,可以得出以下结论:(1)在活体革兰氏阳性或革兰氏阴性感染模型以及沙门氏菌和李斯特菌等细胞内微生物感染模型中,TNF-α的中和或基因缺失常常与宿主防御能力降低有关;(2)缺乏IL-1受体也会导致对李斯特菌或革兰氏阳性细菌的抵抗力下降;(3)防御结核分枝杆菌引起的感染需要TNF-α和干扰素-γ。