| Literature DB >> 24128344 |
Georges J Casimir1, Nicolas Lefèvre2, Francis Corazza3, Jean Duchateau4.
Abstract
This review discusses sex differences in the prognosis of acute or chronic inflammatory diseases. The consequences of severe inflammation vary in relation to sex, depending on illness duration. In the majority of acute diseases, males present higher mortality rates, whereas continuous chronic inflammation associated with tissue damage is more deleterious in females. The recruitment of cells, along with its clinical expression, is more significant in females, as reflected by higher inflammatory markers. Given that estrogens or androgens are known to modulate inflammation, their different levels in males and females cannot account for the sexual dimorphism observed in humans and animals from birth to death with regard to inflammation. Numerous studies evaluated receptors, cytokine production, and clinical outcomes in both animals and humans, revealing that estrogens clearly modulate the immune response, but the results are contradictory and difficult to link to hormone concentrations. Even in prepubescent children, the presentation of acute pneumonia or chronic diseases mimics the adult pattern. Several genes located on the X chromosome have been shown to encode molecules involved in inflammation. Moreover, 10% to 15% of the genes from silenced X chromosome may escape inhibition. Females are also a mosaic of cells with genes from either paternal or maternal X chromosome. Therefore, polymorphism of X-linked genes would result in the presence of two cell populations with distinct regulatory arsenals, providing females with greater diversity to fight against infectious challenges, in comparison with the uniform cell populations in hemizygous males. The similarities observed between males and Turner syndrome patients using an endotoxin stimulation model support the difference in gene expression between monosomy and disomy for the X chromosome. Considering the enhanced inflammation in females, cytokine production may be assumed to be higher in females than males. Even if all results are not clear-cut, nonetheless, many studies have reported higher cytokine levels in both male humans and animals than in females. High IL-6 levels in males correlated with poorer prognosis and shorter longevity. A sound understanding of the basic regulatory mechanisms responsible for these gender differences may lead to new therapeutic targets.Entities:
Keywords: Cytokines; Hormones; Respiratory inflammation; Sex; X chromosome
Year: 2013 PMID: 24128344 PMCID: PMC3765878 DOI: 10.1186/2042-6410-4-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Worse prognosis in males in acute diseases and in females during chronic inflammatory diseases
| Acute diseases (higher in males) | | | | |
| Hyaline membrane disease | 54,064 | Premature newborns | Ratio 1.76:1 | [ |
| Meconium aspiration | 21,472 | Newborns | [ | |
| Mortality and morbidity of hospitalized children | Nearly 500,000 | Children | [ | |
| Severe sepsis in children | 1,586,253 | Children | [ | |
| Pediatric hospital admissions | 92,332 | Children | Males 59% | [ |
| Acute respiratory failure after bone marrow transplantation | 318 | Children | [ | |
| Tuberculosis in Bangladesh | 266,189 | Adults | Ratio M/F, 1:0.33 | [ |
| Tuberculosis in India | 90,000 | Adults | [ | |
| Community-acquired pneumonia | 2-year prospective study | Adults | [ | |
| Acute respiratory distress syndrome | 333,004 | Adults | [ | |
| Post-injury pneumonia | 30,288 | More than 65 years | [ | |
| Hospitalized community-acquired pneumonia | 623,718 | More than 65 years | [ | |
| In-hospital community-acquired pneumonia (elderly) | 717 | More than 65 years | [ | |
| Australian seniors with chronic respiratory disease | 108,312 | More than 65 years | [ | |
| Mycoplasma respiratory disease (mice) | 55 | Adult animals | [ | |
| Chronic respiratory diseases (poorer prognosis in females) | | | | |
| Chronic inflammatory diseases (children) | 149 children | Children | [ | |
| Asthma in adolescents (sex ratio in severe asthma 5 F/1 M) | 2,693 | Adolescents | Ratio 1.85:1 | [ |
| Chronic pulmonary diseases (females smokers) | Meta-analysis (55,709) | Adults | [ | |
| HIV-related pneumocystis pneumonia | 3,070 | Adults | [ | |
| Cystic fibrosis | 21,047 | 1 to 20 years: females 60% more likely to die, outside same risk | [ | |
| Asthma | 3,013 | 5 to 62 years | [ | |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases (COPD) emergencies | 794 | Adults | [ | |
| COPD | Clinical commentary | Adults | More females than males | [ |
Biological and clinical features associated to sexual dimorphism in inflammation
| Biological markers | CRP | ⬆ | ⬇ |
| ESR | ⬆ | ⬇ | |
| IL-8 | ⬆ | ⬇ | |
| IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α | ⬇ | ⬆ | |
| CD99 | ⬇ | ⬆ | |
| Hematological markers | Neutrophil count | ⬆ | ⬇ |
| Monocyte count | ⬇ | ⬆ | |
| Clinical features | Outcome in acute inflammatory processes (septic shock, burns, trauma) | Better prognosis | Worse prognosis |
| Outcome in chronic inflammatory processes (severe asthma, cystic fibrosis, BPCO) | Worse prognosis | Better prognosis |
The table summarizes the main trends observe in the literature. Up arrow denotes increase; down arrow, decrease.