Author:
Lee Yi-Che,Tsai Yau-Sheng,Hung Shih-Yuan,Lin Tsun-Mei,Lin Sheng-Hsiang,Liou Hung-Hsiang,Liu Hsiang-Chun,Chang Min-Yu,Wang Hsi-Hao,Ho Li-Chun,Chen Yi-Ting,Chen Hsin-Pao,Fan Hong-Arh,Liu Kuang-Wen,Kung Yung-Tang,Wang Hao-Kuang,Chiou Yuan-Yow
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Peritoneal dialysis (PD) therapy is known to induce morphological and functional changes in the peritoneal membrane. Long-term exposure to conventional bio-incompatible dialysate and peritonitis is the main etiology of inflammation. Consequently, the peritoneal membrane undergoes structural changes, including angiogenesis, fibrosis, and hyalinizing vasculopathy, which ultimately results in technique failure. The epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) of mesothelial cells (MCs) plays an important role during the above process; however, the clinical parameters associated with the EMT process of MCs remain to be explored.
Methods
To investigate the parameters impacting EMT during PD therapy, 53 clinical stable PD patients were enrolled. EMT assessments were conducted through human peritoneal MCs cultured from dialysate effluent with one consistent standard criterion (MC morphology and the expression of an epithelial marker, cytokeratin 18). The factors potentially associated with EMT were analyzed using logistic regression analysis. Primary MCs derived from the omentum were isolated for the in vitro study.
Results
Forty-seven percent of the patients presented with EMT, 28% with non-EMT, and 15% with a mixed presentation. Logistic regression analysis showed that patients who received persistent PD therapy (dwelling time of 24 h/day) had significantly higher EMT tendency. These results were consistent in vitro.
Conclusions
Dwelling time had a significant effect on the occurrence of EMT on MCs.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
9 articles.
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