Background: Interferon-gamma may have immunopathogenic importance in primary biliary cirrhosis, stimulating aberrant expression on biliary epithelium of class II major histocompatibility molecules and inter-cellular adhesion molecule-1. Liver transcripts for interferon-gamma are found in primary biliary cirrhosis. Its serum level is increased in pretransplantation stages and decreases after transplantation.
Objectives: (1) To verify whether serum interferon-gamma levels are increased in non-cirrhotic stages of primary biliary cirrhosis. (2) To evaluate the effect of ursodeoxycholic acid and prednisone alone and in combination on serum levels of interferon-gamma and soluble inter-cellular adhesion molecule-1.
Methods: Nine non-cirrhotic, anicteric patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (patient test group), 14 healthy, negative controls and 14 positive controls, with chronic hepatitis related to hepatitis C virus were studied in basal condition. Primary biliary cirrhosis patients were treated with ursodeoxycholic acid, prednisone and the association of the two drugs for three 4-week periods, each period separated by a 4-week wash-out. Interferon-gamma and soluble inter-cellular adhesion molecule-1 were measured in serum by commercially available immuno-enzymatic kits.
Results: Median interferon-gamma levels were increased in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis compared with healthy controls (44 vs 19 pg/ml; P < 0.01) but similar to those in chronic hepatitis patients (47 pg/ml). Serum soluble inter-cellular adhesion molecule-1 was significantly reduced by ursodeoxycholic acid, and an even greater reduction was obtained on addition of prednisone. No treatment affected interferon-gamma levels.
Conclusion: Serum interferon-gamma is increased in noncirrhotic patients with primary biliary cirrhosis, but this is not disease-specific. Neither ursodeoxycholic acid, nor prednisone, nor the combination of the two drugs influenced this immunological pathway of primary biliary cirrhosis.