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Using ethnography to investigate life scientists' information needs
Authors:DE Forsythe
Affiliation:Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland 21210, USA.
Abstract:Although several liver diseases of childhood, particularly biliary atresia (BA) and cystic fibrosis (CF) liver disease (CFLD) are characterized by hepatic fibrosis, the pathogenesis of this process is incompletely understood. The cytokine transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) has been implicated in hepatic fibrosis in experimental animals, in which both the hepatic expression and plasma concentration of this cytokine are increased. The objective of our study was to determine whether there are similar alterations of TGF-beta1 in patients with hepatic fibrosis secondary to either BA and/or CFLD. The study design was as follows. In study 1, plasma TGF-beta1 was assessed by ELISA in 9 children with BA undergoing liver transplantation, 11 patients with CFLD, and appropriate control subjects. In study 2, hepatic expression of TGF-beta1 protein (assessed immunohistochemically) and hepatic fibrosis were scored semiquantitatively, on a 1-3 scale, by blinded investigators, in archival liver biopsy specimens from 10 children with BA, 10 with CFLD, and from 10 older children with normal hepatic histology, as well as in 4 patients with liver diseases of various etiologies. Simultaneous plasma and liver TGF-beta1 studies were performed in 8 patients with liver disease. Results were as follows. Plasma TGF-beta1 values were inversely correlated with age in healthy subjects (r=-0.54, p < 0.0001). The plasma TGF-beta1 protein of children with BA was decreased (13+/-2 ng/mL) compared with values for healthy children (42+/-6 ng/mL, n=10, p < 0.005). Similarly, the plasma TGF-beta1 concentration in patients with CFLD was also decreased compared with values for children with CF and normal serum liver profiles (n=14) (2+/-1 ng/mL versus 12+/-1, p < 0.05). However, the plasma TGF-beta1 concentration was increased in two patients with other types of liver disease. The hepatic expression of TGF-beta1 was increased in the presence of hepatic fibrosis in all types of liver diseases studied. Forty-six percent of patients had both marked hepatic fibrosis and marked TGF-beta1 labeling; 86% of samples without fibrosis showed no TGF-beta1 labeling, p=0.007. In conclusion, these studies have established the association of hepatic TGF-beta1 protein and hepatic fibrosis in several common liver diseases of childhood. Our data also suggest that, in children, plasma TGF-beta1 does not appear to be a useful marker of hepatic expression of this cytokine.
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