THE RELATION OF INTERLEUKIN-6, TUMOR NECROSIS FACTOR-α, IL-2, AND IL-2 RECEPTOR LEVELS TO CELLULAR REJECTION, ALLOGRAFT DYSFUNCTION, AND CLINICAL EVENTS EARLY AFTER CARDIAC TRANSPLANTATION

Abstract
Immunoregulatory cytokines have been implicated in the pathophysiology of graft dysfunction after heart transplantation (HTx). In 15 consecutive patients undergoing HTx we prospectively determined levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumor-necrosis-factor-α(TNF-α), interleukin-2 (IL-2), and soluble-interleukin-2-receptor (sIL-2-R) at eight points in time during biopsy and right heart catheterization and within 12 hr of echocardiography during the first three months after HTx. Blood was taken from the pulmonary arterial line. IL-6-levels correlated positively with hemodynamic and echocardiographic parameters of pump dysfunction—namely, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, pulmonary arterial pressure, right atrial pressure, heart rate—and negatively with isovolumic relaxation time and stroke volume independent of the degree of cellular rejection as classified by the ISHLT criteria. A similar pattern was found for TNF-α- and sIL-2-R, while IL-2 correlated negatively with left and right heart filling pressures and positively with fractional shortening. In the three patients who died of sepsis or multiorgan failure within the study period IL-6-, TNF-α, and sIL-2-R-levels were elevated and IL-2-levels were suppressed compared with the 12 patients with a stable clinical course. IL-6 and sIL-2-R correlated positively while IL-6 and IL-2 correlated negatively. In this pilot study, a cytokine pattern with elevated levels of IL-6, TNF-α, and sIL-2-R as well as suppressed levels of IL-2 in the early period after HTx corresponds to impaired hemodynamics independent of cellular rejection and may indicate an unfavorable prognosis. These cytokines may therefore be useful for monitoring and warrant further study.