| Literature DB >> 28109186 |
Megan E Roerink1, Marieke E van der Schaaf2, Charles A Dinarello3,4, Hans Knoop2,5, Jos W M van der Meer3.
Abstract
Fatigue is commonly reported in a variety of illnesses, and it has major impact on quality of life. Previously, it was thought that fatigue originates in the skeletal muscles, leading to cessation of activity. However, more recently, it has become clear that the brain is the central regulator of fatigue perception. It has been suggested that pro-inflammatory cytokines, especially interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1α) and interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β), play a prominent role in the development of central fatigue, and several studies have been performed to elucidate the connection between inflammation and these central processes.In this narrative review, mechanisms of action of IL-1 are described, with special attention to its effect on the central nervous system. In addition, we present a summary of studies that (i) investigated the relationship between circulating IL-1α and IL-1β and fatigue severity and/or (ii) evaluated the effect of inhibiting IL-1 on fatigue. We aim to improve the understanding of fatigue in both inflammatory and non-inflammatory illnesses, which could help develop strategies to treat fatigue more effectively.Reviewing the studies that have been performed, it appears that there is a limited value of measuring circulating IL-1. However, inhibiting IL-1 has a positive effect on severe fatigue in most studies that have been conducted.Entities:
Keywords: Fatigue; Inhibition; Interleukin 1; Treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28109186 PMCID: PMC5251329 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-017-0796-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Overview of studies measuring IL-1 in patients reporting fatigue
| Reference | Disease activity | Number of patients | Fatigue questionnaire | IL-1 measurement | Main outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rheumatoid arthritis | |||||
| Lampa et al., 2014 | No neurological disease or generalized pain nor of swollen joints 4.9 ± 3.8 | Patients ( | VAS-fatigue | CSF IL-1 and IL-1Ra | Higher IL-1β and lower IL-Ra in RA vs controls ( |
| Sjögrens syndrome | |||||
| Harboe et al., 2009 | No acute illness in the week prior to or after sampling, no CRP/ESR elevation | Patients ( | FSS, VAS-fatigue | CSF IL-1β, IL-1Ra, and IL-1sRII | Higher IL-1Ra in patients ( |
| Sarcoidosis | |||||
| Korenromp et al., 2011 | No disease activity | Fatigued patients ( | CIS-fatigue (severe fatigue when ≥35) | Plasma IL-1α, IL-1β, and IL-1Ra | No significant differences |
| Whole blood production of IL-1α and IL-1β after stimulation with LPS (1 ng/ml) | |||||
| Baydur et al., 2010 | Pulmonary sarcoidosis | Patients ( | MFI-20 | Plasma IL-1β before, directly after and 4–6 h after exercise | Higher fatigue scores in sarcoidosis patients ( |
| Cancer | |||||
| Mixed (cancer survivors plus advanced cancer) | |||||
| De Raaf et al., 2012 | Advanced cancer or 1–5 years post cancer treatment | Advanced cancer ( | MFI | Plasma IL-1Ra | Advanced cancer patients had higher IL-1Ra concentrations ( |
| Prostate cancer | |||||
| Greenberg et al.,1993 | Men undergoing localized radiotherapy | Patients ( | VAS-fatigue/daily during 8 weeks | Serum IL-1β, at baseline and weekly thereafter | A rise in fatigue was seen between weeks 1 and 4, fatigue stabilized during week 5 and increased again in weeks 6 and 7. Rise in fatigue during the first 4 weeks was accompanied by increased IL-1β concentrations ( |
| Bower et al., 2009 | Patients undergoing external beam radiation therapy | Prostate cancer ( | FSI/fatigue during the past week/baseline, after 5/10/20 days of treatment, final week of treatment, and 2 weeks and 2 months after treatment | Serum IL-1β, IL-1Ra in a subset of patients, at same time-points as the questionnaires | Fatigue increased in both groups during treatment. Significant quadratic trend for IL-1β during treatment ( |
| Dirksen et al., 2014 | Non-metastatic cancer prior to radiation therapy | Patients ( | POMS fatigue (inertia subscale)/pre-treatment en post-treatment | Serum IL-1β, pre-treatment and post-treatment (<2 weeks after radiotherapy, <10 weeks after brachytherapy) | Fatigue was increased post-treatment ( |
| Jim et al., 2012 | Non-metastatic or asymptomatic metastatic prostate cancer | Patients ( | FSI (fatigue over the past week)/at baseline and after 6 months | SNP in IL1B gene (rs16944) | IL1B had no significant effect on fatigue-related outcomes |
| Breast cancer | |||||
| Geinitz et al., 2000 | Women undergoing postoperative radiotherapy (no chemotherapy), without metastatic disease | Patients ( | FAQ, and VAS-fatigue/during previous week/at baseline, end of weeks 1–5, and 2 months after treatment | Serum IL-1β, same time points as questionnaires | VAS-fatigue increased until week 4 ( |
| Von Ah et al., 2008 | Stage 0–IIIa breast cancer before adjuvant therapy | Patients ( | Piper-fatigue scale/at baseline and at 3 months (during adjuvant therapy) and 6 months after baseline (initial recovery) | Whole blood production of IL-1β after stimulation with PHA (10 μg/ml) | IL-1β predicted fatigue before adjuvant therapy ( |
| Liu et al., 2012 | Stage I–III breast cancer prior to ≥4 3-week cycles of chemotherapy | Patients ( | MFSI-SF/fatigue during past week/at baseline and during cycles 1 and 4 of chemotherapy (last 2 weeks) | Plasma IL-1Ra, at the same time points as questionnaires | Fatigue significantly increased over time ( |
| Schmidt et al., 2015 | Stage 0–III breast cancer prior to adjuvant radiation therapy | Patients ( | FAQ/at baseline, after completion of radiotherapy (week 7), and the end of the intervention (week 13, resistant exercise/relaxation) | Serum IL-1Ra, at the same time points as questionnaires | Moderate correlation between IL-6/IL-1Ra at the end of radiotherapy with physical fatigue at the same time ( |
| Bower et al., 2002 | Stage 0–II breast cancer 1–5 years after diagnosis, after completion of treatment | Fatigued ( | Energy/fatigue subscale RAND-36 (score 0–50 = high fatigue, score 70–100 = low fatigue)/fatigue during past 4 weeks FSI/fatigue during past week | Serum IL-1β and IL-1Ra | Fatigued women had significantly higher IL-1Ra concentrations ( |
| Bower et al., 2011 | Stage 0–IIIA breast cancer, after completion of primary cancer therapy (within past 3 months) i.e., surgery, radiation, and/or chemotherapy | Patients ( | FSI (cut-off 3)/fatigue during the past week | Plasma IL-1Ra | 64% scored above 3 on the FSI; these patients did not have a higher IL-1Ra concentration. There was no significant association between IL-1Ra and fatigue or chemotherapy exposure. |
| Bower et al., 2007 | Stage 0–II breast cancer survivors (6.5–10 years after diagnosis) | Fatigued ( | Vitality scale SF-36 (<50 = significant fatigue, >70 = absence of significant fatigue) | Whole blood production of IL-1β after stimulation with LPS (100 pg/ml) or cortisol (0, 10−8, 10−7, 10−6M), at baseline, directly after TSST, and after 30 min recovery | No differences at baseline. IL-1β increased significantly in fatigued patients after completion of the TSST ( |
| Collado-Hidalgo et al., 2006 | Stage 0–III breast cancer survivors, 1–5 years post-diagnosis | Fatigued ( | Vitality scale SF-36 (<50 = significant fatigue, >70 = absence of significant fatigue) | Plasma IL-1Ra | IL-1Ra was significantly higher in fatigued breast-cancer survivors ( |
| Orre et al., 2011 | Stage II–III breast cancer patients, 2.7–7.2 years after postoperative locoregional radiotherapy | Patients ( | Fatigue questionnaire | Serum IL-1Ra | There was no significant association between IL-1Ra and fatigue. |
| Collado-Hidalgo et al., 2009 | Stage 0–III breast cancer survivors, 1–5 years post-diagnosis | Fatigued ( | Vitality scale SF-36 (≤55 = significant fatigue, >70 = absence of significant fatigue), MFSI | IL-1B-511 (CT) polymorphism | Fatigued survivors had a substantial overrepresentation of CC alleles, and underrepresentation of TT alleles. The prevalence of at least one cytosine was more frequent among fatigued patients ( |
| Reinertsen et al., 2011 | Stage II–III breast cancer survivors | Fatigued ( | Fatigue questionnaire (cut-off 4, clinical significant fatigue), chronic fatigue was defined as fatigue being present for at least 6 months | IL-1B rs16944 (A/G) SNP, and IL-1β mRNA expression | There was no association between chronic fatigue and the IL-1B SNP or IL-1β mRNA expression. |
| Testicular cancer | |||||
| Orre et al., 2009 | Patients 5–20 years after unilateral orchiectomy | Fatigued ( | Fatigue questionnaire (cut-off 4, clinical significant fatigue), chronic fatigue was defined as fatigue being present for at least 6 months | Plasma IL-1Ra | Fatigued patients had significant higher IL-1Ra ( |
| Uterine cancer | |||||
| Ahlberg et al., 2004 | Patients receiving external radiation therapy after hysterectomy | Patients ( | MFI-20/at baseline, after 30Gy (+3 weeks) and after 46Gy (+5–6 weeks) | Plasma IL-1 (α or β unknown), same time-points as questionnaires | Fatigue increased during treatment, IL-1 remained below the detection limit during the entire study period (4 pg/ml). |
| AML/MDS | |||||
| Meyers et al., 2005 | Newly diagnosed AML/MDS before undergoing chemotherapy. | Patients ( | Brief fatigue inventory (cut-off score ≥4, moderate-severe fatigue)/fatigue in the past 24 h/baseline and after 1 month of treatment | Plasma IL-1 (α or β unknown) and IL-1Ra, at baseline. | There was a positive correlation of IL-1Ra and fatigue ( |
| Post-stroke fatigue | |||||
| Ormstad et al., 2011 | Acute stroke patients | Patients ( | FSS (dichotomized as a score ≥4 or <4)/at 6, 12, and 18 months after stroke | Serum IL-1β and IL-1Ra, <24h ( | Significant correlation between IL-1β and fatigue at 6 months ( |
| Becker et al., 2015 | Acute stroke patients | Patients ( | FAS/30/90/180/365 days after stroke | IL1RN SNP rs4251961 | Carriers of a C allele reported more fatigue ( |
| CFS | |||||
| Hornig et al., 2015 | CFS | Patients (illness duration ≤3 years | MFI | Plasma IL-1α, IL-1β and IL-1Ra | There were no differences when comparing all patients combined to controls. However, patients with a short illness duration had significantly higher IL-1α ( |
| Russell et al., 2016 | CFS (female) | Patients; 1. ≤18/illness duration ≤2 years ( | Chalder fatigue in adolescents, and MFI in other patients | Plasma IL-1α and IL-1β | Looking at individual expression, there were no differences between patients and controls. IL-1α appeared in a linear classification model in the adolescent group, but not in the other 2 groups. |
| Hardcastle et al., 2015 | Moderate (mobile) or severe (housebound) CFS | Moderate CFS ( | FSS | Serum IL-1β and IL-1Ra | Significant IL-1β increase in moderate compared with severe CFS patients ( |
| Landi et al., 2016 | CFS | Patients ( | MFI | Plasma IL-1α and IL-1β | No significant differences. |
| Chao et al., 1991 | CFS | Patients ( | VAS-fatigue | Serum IL-1β | No differences in serum IL-1β. IL-1β production after LPS stimulation was significantly higher in CFS patients ( |
| PBMC production of IL-1β after stimulation with LPS (1 ng/ml) or PHA (4 μg/ml) | |||||
| Swanink et al., 1996 | CFS | Patients ( | CIS | Plasma IL-1α, IL-1β, and IL-1Ra | No differences in circulating cytokine concentrations. Significant lower IL-1β production after LPS stimulation ( |
| Whole blood production of IL-1α, IL-1β, and IL-1Ra after stimulation with LPS | |||||
| Mawle et al., 1997 | CFS | Patients ( | – | PBL production of IL-1α and IL-1β after stimulation with PHA | IL-1α production was lower in severely ill patients ( |
| Cannon et al., 1997 | Sudden onset CFS | Patients ( | – | PBMC production of IL-1β, IL-1Ra, and IL-1sRII after stimulation with LPS (1 ng/ml), indomethacin, or a combination, before and daily after a 15 min exercise on day 2 | At baseline, controls had a significant increase in IL-1β production during the luteal phase (unstimulated, |
| Tomoda et al., 2005 | CFS | Patients ( | – | IL-1β production of PBMCs after stimulation with PHA (5 μg/ml) or LPS (50 ng/ml) | No significant differences. |
| Lloyd et al., 1991 | CFS | Patients ( | – | Serum and CSF IL-1β | No significant differences. |
| Peterson et al., 2015 | CFS | Patients ( | – | CSF IL-1β and IL-1Ra | No significant differences. |
| Natelson et al., 2005 | CFS | Patients ( | MFI | CSF IL-1α and IL-1β | No significant differences. |
| Hornig et al., 2016 | CFS | Patients ( | – | CSF IL-1α, IL-1β and IL-1Ra | CFS patients had significant lower IL-1β and IL-1Ra concentrations compared to normal controls ( |
| (Post-)infectious fatigue | |||||
| Vollmer-Conna et al., 2004 | Patients with acute Q-fever, EBV, or RRV | Q-fever ( | Physical symptom checklist/fatigue in the past 2 weeks | Serum IL-1β | Fatigue was reported in 100% of Q-fever patients, >75% of EBV patients, and >50% of RRV patients. In Q-fever, IL-1β correlated significantly with fatigue ( |
| PBMC production of IL-1β after stimulation with LPS (10 ng/ml) | |||||
| Vollmer-Conna et al., 2007 | Patients with post-infectious fatigue and post-infectious patients without fatigue | EBV ( | Somatic and psychological health report (fatigue was defined as a score ≥3 on the SOMA subscale)/at 1, 2, 3, 6, and 12 months after onset of the infection | Serum IL-1β | No significant differences. |
| PBMC production of IL-1β after stimulation with LPS (10 ng/ml), mouse anti-human or anti-CD3 | |||||
An overview of all studies that investigated the relationship between IL-1 and fatigue severity
Abbreviations: AML acute myeloid leukemia, CFS chronic fatigue syndrome, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, CIS checklist individual strength, CRP C-reactive protein, EBV Epstein-Barr virus, ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate, FAS fatigue assessment scale, FAQ functional activity questionnaire, FSI fatigue symptom inventory, FSS fatigue severity scale, LPS lipopolysaccharide, MDS myelodysplastic syndrome, MFI multidimensional fatigue inventory, MFSI multidimensional fatigue symptom inventory, MS multiple sclerosis, PBL peripheral blood leukocytes, PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cell, PHA phytohaemagglutinin, POMS profile of mood states, RRV Ross river virus, SF short form, TSST Trier social stress test, VAS visual analog scale
Overview of studies evaluating the effect of inhibiting IL-1 on fatigue severity
| Reference | Disease activity | Design | Number of patients | Fatigue questionnaire | IL-1 intervention | Main outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rheumatoid arthritis | ||||||
| Alten et al., 2011 | ≥6 of 28 tender and swollen joints, elevated hsCRP and/or ESR | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, dose-finding trial | 274 | FACIT-F at 12 weeks | MTX combined with canakinumab: (1.) 150mg s.c. every 4 weeks ( | Decrease in fatigue canakinumab group 1 ( |
| Omdal et al., 2005 | Mean DAS28 6.2 ± 1.1 | Pilot, non-blinded, no control group | 8 | FSS and VAS-fatigue at baseline, week 4, and week 8 | 100 mg s.c. anakinra daily | Decrease in FSS ( |
| Sjögrens syndrome | ||||||
| Norheim et al., 2012 | No elevation CRP/ESR | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group trial | 26, 1 not included in analysis | FSS and VAS-fatigue at baseline, week 0, week 2, week 4, and week 5 | 100 mg s.c. anakinra ( | No difference FSS scores after 4 weeks, more frequent reduction of VAS-fatigue of >50% in anakinra group (50 vs 8%, |
| CAPS | ||||||
| Kone-Paut et al., 2011 | Moderate or severe disease activity | Part 1. open-label, followed by part 2. which was a double-blind withdrawal phase in responders, ending with open-label part 3 | 35 | 5-point likert scale, daily first 15 days of part 1, weekly thereafter (physician and patient), FACIT-F | Single canakinumab (150 mg) dose in part 1 ( | Fatigue absent or minimal at the end of part 1 in >85% of patients paralleled by decreased disease activity. Increase FACIT-F at the end of part 1 ( |
| Huemmerle- Deschner, 2011 | Disease activity requiring medical intervention | Open label, phase II trial | 7 (pediatric) | 5-point likert scale at post-treatment days 1 and 2, and weeks 1 and 5 (physician) | Canakinumab 150 mg or 2 mg/kg, repeated after 7 days in absence of complete response. | Fatigue was absent or minimal 1 day after canakinumab in all patients. This was accompanied by a decrease in disease activity. |
| Hoffman et al., 2008 | NLPRP3 mutation combined with classic FCAS/MWS symptoms | Part 1. 6-week randomized controlled trial, part 2A. open-label, 2B. randomized controlled trial | 47 | DHAF rating fatigue over previous 24 h | Part 1 loading dose of 320 mg rilonacept/placebo s.c. ( | Decrease in fatigue in part 1 ( |
| Diabetes | ||||||
| Cavelti-Weder et al., 2011 | Type 2 diabetes | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | 30 | Fatigue scale for motor and cognitive functions | XOMA052/placebo (0.01–1 mg/kg) | At baseline, 53% of patients experienced mild-severe fatigue. One month after treatment, fatigue was increased in the placebo and lowest dosing group; in the two medium dosing groups, fatigue was slightly decreased; and in the two highest dosing groups, fatigue was remarkably decreased. |
| Cancer | ||||||
| Hong et al., 2015 [ | Advanced non-small cell lung cancer | Open label dose escalation trial | 16 | EORTC-QLQ, at baseline and after 8 weeks | Intravenous MABp1 every 3 weeks trough 4 dosing levels (0.25/0.75/1.25/3.75 mg/kg, and 3.75 mg/kg every 2 weeks (until disease progression)) | Non significant improvement in fatigue severity. Median disease free progression was 57 days. |
| Hickish et al., 2016 | Metastatic colorectal cancer refractory to standard chemotherapy | Randomized controlled trial | 309 | EORTC-QLQ | MABp1 plus best supportive care or placebo (2:1) | Significant improvement of fatigue, increase in appetite, and decrease in pain severity |
An overview of all studies that investigated the relationship between IL-1 and fatigue severity
Abbreviations: CAPS cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome, CRP C-reactive protein, DAS disease activity score, DHAF daily health assessment form, EORTC-QLQ European organization for research and treatment of cancer quality of life questionnaire, ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate, FACIT-F functional assessment of chronic illness therapy subscale fatigue, FCAS familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome, FSS fatigue severity scale, hsCRP high-sensitive C-reactive protein, MTX methotrexate, MWS Muckle-Wells syndrome, s.c. subcutaneous, VAS visual analog scale
Fig. 1Overview of routes by which peripherally produced IL-1 is able to influence IL-1 levels in the brain. An overview of the five different routes that can be used by peripherally produced IL-1α and IL-1β to access the CNS. The first route (1) is diffusion of IL-1 trough the fenestrated endothelium surrounding blood vessels in the circumventricular organs (CVOs). The rest of the brain microvasculature is surrounded by the blood-brain barrier (BBB), where diffusion is not possible due to tight junctions between cells. In these areas, IL-1 can be transported across the BBB by a saturable transport system (2), or it can activate perivascular macrophages at the brain side of blood vessels, stimulating them to produce IL-1 (3). These three routes combined are frequently described as the humoral pathway, which is able to activate microglial cells in the brain parenchyma (5). Another important system is the neuronal pathway, where peripherally produced IL-1 stimulates afferent nerves, especially the vagal nerve, causing local IL-1 production in the CNS by microglial cells (4). Increased concentrations of IL-1 in different areas of the brain are suspected to influence neurotransmitter systems (e.g., dopamine and serotonin), thereby exerting its effect on behavior and the development of fatigue