Abstract P1174: Endometriosis diagnosis, staging, and typology in relation to inflammatory cytokines

  • University of Utah ROR
  • Intermountain Healthcare ROR
  • Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, College of Medicine -... ROR
  • George Mason University ROR
  • Brigham and Women's Hospital ROR
  • University of Utah Health, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States

Circulation, 151(Suppl_1)

DOI 10.1161/cir.151.suppl_1.p1174

Abstract

Introduction

Endometriosis, affecting 11% of reproductive-aged persons, is characterized by ectopic endometrial tissue and chronic inflammation. Prior research suggests those with endometriosis have higher cardiovascular disease risk, but mechanisms remain elusive. The objective of this study is to assess whether endometriosis diagnosis, staging, and typology (superficial endometriosis (SE), ovarian endometriomas (OE), and deep infiltrating endometriosis (DE)) are associated with serum interleukin-6 (IL-6), interleukin-8 (IL-8), and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-) concentrations.

Methods

The study analyzed data from 395 premenopausal persons in Utah undergoing gynecologic laparoscopy who participated in the NICHD ENDO study (2007–2009). Post-operative reports determined endometriosis typology (SE, OE, DE) and staging (minimal, mild, moderate, severe) using Revised American Society for Reproductive Medicine classification. Elevated serum cytokine concentrations were defined as IL-6 ≥2pg/mL, IL-8 ≥3pg/mL, and TNF- ≥7.5pg/mL. Generalized linear models generated adjusted prevalence ratios (aPR) 95% CI controlling for age, BMI, marital status, race/ethnicity, and serum cotinine.

Results

Participants were on average 32 years (SD=7) at time of gynecologic laparoscopy/laparotomy, non-Hispanic white (79%), married (71%), mean BMI 28 (SD=8) and non-smokers (83% serum cotinine <10ng/mL). Forty-two percent (n=166) were diagnosed with incident endometriosis. We found no differences among those with, compared to without, endometriosis and elevated IL-6, 12% vs 10%, aPR: 1.01 (0.97, 1.10), IL-8, 5% vs 8%, aPR: 0.99 (0.94, 1.04); and TNF, 16% vs 13%, aPR: 1.00 (0.96, 1.04). While there were no statistically significant associations between endometriosis staging or typology and cytokines, those with moderate to severe endometriosis had nonsignificant lower IL-6 and IL-8 (aPR: 0.61 [0.15, 2.52] and aPR: 0.74 [0.17, 3.20]) but higher TNF- (aPR: 1.27 [0.56, 2.84]), compared to no endometriosis. Individuals with OE and DE had nonsignificant trends of IL-6 and Il-8 (aPR: 0.86 [0.11, 2.52] and aPR: 0.93 [0.14, 6.43]) but higher TNF- (aPR: 1.93 [0.77, 4.84]).

Conclusions

In summary, this study found no clear correlation between endometriosis diagnosis, staging, typology and inflammatory markers IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-. Whether endometriosis severity or typology is associated with TNFshould be explored in future studies with adequate power and more representative samples.

Topics

endometriosis inflammatory cytokines IL-6 IL-8 TNF-alpha, endometriosis staging typology cardiovascular disease risk, deep infiltrating endometriosis inflammatory markers serum, endometriosis diagnosis ASRM staging cytokine levels, Schliep ENDO study endometriosis inflammation biomarkers, superficial endometriosis ovarian endometrioma inflammatory markers, endometriosis cardiovascular risk mechanisms inflammation, NICHD ENDO study premenopausal laparoscopy cytokines, endometriosis severity TNF-alpha serum concentration, chronic inflammation endometriosis reproductive-aged women
DOI 10.1161/cir.151.suppl_1.p1174 10.1161/cir.151.suppl_1.p1174

Cite this article

Shaaban, M., Farland, L., Pollack, A., Rexrode, K., Hemmert, R., Paulsen, M., Ryan, J., Adediran, E., Peterson, M., Page, J., & Schliep, K. (2025). Abstract P1174: Endometriosis diagnosis, staging, and typology in relation to inflammatory cytokines. *Circulation*, *151*(Suppl_1). https://doi.org/10.1161/cir.151.suppl_1.p1174

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