Background: Chronic hyperplastic eosinophilic sinusitis (CHS) results from the unregulated proliferation of eosinophils, TH2-like lymphocytes, goblet cells, mast cells, and fibroblasts and is present in most patients with asthma. The frequent coexpression of these disorders and their shared pathophysiology suggests that these are similar disorders affecting the upper and lower airways. Objective: We evaluated the expression of cysteinyl leukotrienes (CysLTs) in sinus tissue from subjects with CHS compared with that seen in healthy sinus tissue. Methods: Nasal polyp and sinus tissue was evaluated from 58 individuals undergoing elective functional endoscopic sinus surgery. The diagnosis of CHS was demonstrated through the presence of eosinophilia and activated (EG2+) eosinophils, as determined by means of tissue immunohistochemistry. Data were compared with those from both nasal polyp tissue without eosinophilic inflammation and healthy control sinus tissue obtained from the sinus ostiomeatal complex at the time of surgery for unrelated disorders. CysLTs were quantified by means of ELISA in lipid-extracted tissue. Activation of the metabolic pathway leading to CysLT synthesis was demonstrated by ribonuclease protection. Subjects were genotyped for leukotriene C4 (LTC4) synthase C-to-A promoter polymorphism. Results: CysLT concentrations were significantly higher in tissue obtained from subjects with CHS (776.7 ± 201.9 pg/g tissue) compared with that seen in healthy sinus tissue (355.7 ± 101.6 pg/g tissue, P
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Steinke, J. W., Bradley, D., Arango, P., Crouse, C. D., Frierson, H., Kountakis, S. E., … Borish, L. (2003). Cysteinyl leukotriene expression in chronic hyperplastic sinusitis-nasal polyposis: Importance to eosinophilia and asthma. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 111(2), 342–349. https://doi.org/10.1067/mai.2003.67
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