Introduction: Neonatal sepsis and its accompanying inflammatory response contribute to substantial morbidity and mortality. Pentoxifylline (PTX), a phosphodiesterase inhibitor which suppresses transcription and production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, is a candidate adjunctive therapy for newborn sepsis. We hypothesized that PTX decreases live microbe-induced inflammatory cytokine production in newborn blood.
Methods: Cord blood was stimulated with live microorganisms commonly encountered in newborn sepsis (Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, or Candida albicans), and simultaneously treated with antimicrobial agents (gentamicin, vancomycin, or amphotericin B) and/or clinically relevant concentrations of PTX. Microbial colony counts were enumerated by plating, supernatant cytokines measured by multiplex assay, intracellular cytokines and signaling molecules by flow cytometry, and mRNA by qRT PCR.
Results: PTX inhibited concentration-dependent E. coli-, S. aureus-, S. epidermidis-, and C. albicans-induced TNF and E. coli-induced IL-1β production in whole blood, with greater suppression of pro-inflammatory cytokines in combination with antimicrobial agents. Likewise, PTX suppressed E. coli-induced monocytic TNF and IL-1β, whereby combined PTX and gentamicin led to significantly greater reduction of TNF and IL-1β. The anti-inflammatory effect of PTX on microbe-induced pro-inflammatory cytokine production was accompanied by inhibition of TNF mRNA expression, and was achieved without suppressing the production of the anti-inflammatory IL-10. Of note, microbial colony counts in newborn blood were not increased by PTX.
Conclusion: Our findings demonstrated that PTX inhibited microbe-induced pro-inflammatory cytokine production, especially when combined with antimicrobial agents, without enhancing microbial proliferation in human cord blood in vitro, thus supporting its utility as candidate adjunctive agent for newborn sepsis.
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