Orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) is a successful treatment in patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV)-associated end-stage liver disease worldwide. T lymphocytes and their cytokines are believed to have a pivotal role in the defense against HCV and in allograft rejection. An immunosuppressive drug regimen may cause a cytokine imbalance toward a T helper (TH) cell type 2 profile that is associated with the persistence of infection and acceptance of the graft. The aim of this study is to assess whether cytokine imbalances toward a TH1- or TH2-type response may have a role in recurrent HCV infection and rejection after OLT. Twenty-one intrahepatic T-cell lines of 15 patients with recurrent HCV infection after OLT (group A) and 15 lines of 11 patients with rejection (group B) were studied. Both patient groups had received liver allografts because of HCV- associated end-stage liver disease. Patients with HCV-induced liver disease who did not undergo OLT served as controls: 17 patients with chronic hepatitis C (CH-C) and 8 patients with cirrhosis. At the time of liver biopsy, 14 blood-derived T-cell lines of 12 patients with recurrent HCV infection, 7 of 10 patients with rejection, and 18 of 18 control patients were also investigated. Regardless of the underlying disease (recurrent HCV- infection, rejection, HCV-induced hepatitis, and cirrhosis), all liver tissue-derived T-cell lines produced interferon-γ; some additionally produced interleukin-4 (IL-4), but none produced IL-10, indicating that the TH0/1 cytokine profile dominates. T-cell lines showing a TH1 cytokine profile derived from intrahepatic T cells could be established significantly more often in recurrent HCV infection and rejection than in controls with CH-C (Fishers exact test, P
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Schirren, C. A., Jung, M. C., Worzfeld, T., Mamin, M., Baretton, G. B., Gruener, N. H., … Pape, G. R. (2000). Cytokine profile of liver- and blood-derived nonspecific T cells after liver transplantation: T helper cells type 1/0 lymphokines dominate in recurrent hepatitis C virus infection and rejection. Liver Transplantation, 6(2), 222–228. https://doi.org/10.1002/lt.500060204
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