E. Crawley et al., Hereditary predisposition to low interleukin-10 production in children with extended oligoarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis, RHEUMATOLOG, 40(5), 2001, pp. 574-578
Objective. To determine whether children with extended oligoarticular juven
ile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) produce less of the anti-inflammatory cytoki
ne interleukin-10 (IL-10) than those with persistent oligoarticular JIA.
Methods. We measured IL-10 production in the parents of children with oligo
articular ol extended oligoarticular JIA, from whole-blood cultures stimula
ted with lipopolysaccharide.
Results. IL-10 production was lower in the parents of children with extende
d oligoarticular JIA compared with those of children with oligoarticular JI
A (P = 0.034). There was an increase in the percentage of ATA-containing ge
notypes (i.e. genotypes ATA ATA, ATA ACC ol ATA GCC) in the parents of chil
dren with extended oligoarticular JIA compared with healthy controls (P<0.0
2) but not in the parents of children with oligoarticular JIA.
Conclusions. As approximately 84% of the variation in IL-10 production is t
hought to be genetically regulated, these results suggest that stimulated I
L-10 production would he lower in children with extended oligoarticular JIA
. Because IL-10 is an anti-inflammatory cytokine, this may partly explain w
hy this group of children has more severe disease.