Interleukin-10 but not interleukin-18 may be associated with the immune response against well-differentiated thyroid cancer

Authors

  • Lucas Leite Cunha University of Campinas; Faculty of Medical Sciences; Laboratory of Cancer Molecular Genetics
  • Alfio Jose Tincani University of Campinas; Faculty of Medical Sciences; Department of Surgery; Head and Neck Service
  • Ligia Vera Montalli da Assumpção University of Campinas; Faculty of Medical Sciences; Department of Medicine; Division of Endocrinology
  • Fernando Augusto Soares A. C. Camargo Cancer Hospital; Department of Pathology
  • José Vassallo University of Campinas; Faculty of Medical Sciences; CIPED; Laboratory of Investigative and Molecular Pathology
  • Laura Sterian Ward University of Campinas; Faculty of Medical Sciences; Laboratory of Cancer Molecular Genetics

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322011000700014

Keywords:

Tumor immunity, Interleukin-10, Interleukin-18, Chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis, Immunogenetics

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to investigate the role of the interleukin-18 +105A/C and interleukin-10 -1082A/G germline polymorphisms in the development and outcome of differentiated thyroid carcinoma associated or not with concurrent thyroiditis. METHODS: We studied 346 patients with differentiated thyroid carcinomas, comprising 292 papillary carcinomas and 54 follicular carcinomas, who were followed up for 12-298 months (mean 76.10 ± 68.23 months) according to a standard protocol. We genotyped 200 patients and 144 control individuals for the interleukin-18 +105A/C polymorphism, and we genotyped 183 patients and 137 controls for the interleukin-10 -1082A/G polymorphism. RESULTS: Interleukin-18 polymorphisms were not associated with chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis or any clinical or pathological feature of tumor aggressiveness. However, there was an association between the presence of interleukin-10 variants and chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis. Chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis was present in 21.74% of differentiated thyroid carcinoma patients, most frequently affecting women previously diagnosed with Hashimoto's thyroiditis who had received a lower 131I cumulative dose and did not present lymph node metastases. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that the inheritance of a G allele at the interleukin-10 -1082A/G polymorphism may favor a concurrent thyroid autoimmunity in differentiated thyroid carcinoma patients, and this autoimmunity may favor a better prognosis for these patients.

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Published

2011-01-01

Issue

Section

Clinical Sciences

How to Cite

Interleukin-10 but not interleukin-18 may be associated with the immune response against well-differentiated thyroid cancer . (2011). Clinics, 66(7), 1203-1208. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322011000700014