Altered immune environment in peritoneal endometriotic lesions: relationship to lesion appearance
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Peritoneal endometriotic lesions showed increased immune cell density and aggregates surrounding red and black lesions compared to white lesions, suggesting an active immune response.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To study the localization of and quantify different immune cell populations in red, black, and white peritoneal endometriotic lesions and compare immune cell densities between lesions and the surrounding tissue. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SETTING: Teaching hospital, university research laboratory. PATIENT(S): Participants undergoing laparoscopic excision of endometriosis were recruited from gynecological operating theaters at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney (n = 28). INTERVENTION(S): Immunohistochemical staining for and quantification of dendritic cells (mature and immature), T cells (effector, cytotoxic, and regulatory), B cells, and macrophages in endometriotic peritoneal lesions and the surrounding tissue. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Immune cell densities and aggregates were quantified. RESULT(S): Red and black lesions are significantly more likely to be surrounded by immune cell aggregates than white lesions (P=.036). In the tissue surrounding the peritoneal endometriotic lesions, there was a consistent pattern of greater and more variable density of immune cell populations for red lesions than black or white lesions and a range of significant positive correlations between densities of different immune populations (all P≤.004; not observed within the lesion stroma). CONCLUSION(S): There is a greater presence of immune cells in the tissue surrounding earlier/red and black lesions than older scarred white lesions, particularly in the form of immune cell aggregates, indicating an immunologic response in close proximity to the adjacent lesion. The relationship between densities of immune populations in the tissue surrounding the lesions suggests complementary recruitment and local interactions between cells. Categorizing immune cell populations in proximity to peritoneal endometriotic lesions may improve the understanding of lesion persistence and transition to older white appearances. Early (red) peritoneal endometriotic lesions are surrounded by a greater density of immune cells, including immune aggregates, than later (black or white) lesions. These immune cells may support lesion persistence.
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Cited by (4)
- Deficiency of MST1 in endometriosis related peritoneal macrophages promoted the autophagy of ectopic endometrial stromal cells by IL-10 2022
- Evidence Supporting the Diethylstilbestrol Induction of Endometriosis Via Immune-Inflammatory Pathway in Rat Model 2022
- Immunopathogenesis of endometriosis: An overview of the role of innate and adaptive immune cells and their mediators 2022
- The Inflammatory Feed-Forward Loop Triggered by the Complement Component C3 as a Potential Target in Endometriosis 2021
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