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Enhanced production of IGF-I in the lungs of fibroproliferative ARDS patients.

Physiological Reports 2014 November 2
Insulin-Like Growth Factor I (IGF-I) has been identified in the lungs of individuals with fibrotic lung diseases. In a previous retrospective study, we showed enhanced IGF-I immunoreactivity in individuals with fibroproliferative acute respiratory distress syndrome (FP-ARDS), but we were unable to determine if this correlation was causative. This study was undertaken to prospectively investigate whether IGF-I expression correlated with the fibroproliferative process and whether IGF-I was induced and made in the lungs. We measured IGF-I and procollagen III peptide (PCP-III) in the epithelial lining fluid (ELF) from controls, early ALI/ARDS patients and FP-ARDS patients. We also measured IGF-I mRNA and immunoreactivity from controls and FP-ARDS patient lung biopsies. We determined the level of lung permeability by measuring albumin and urea levels in ELF and serum. Our data show that IGF-I is significantly increased in the ELF in FP-ARDS patients. A significant correlation between IGF-I and PCP-III in the ELF of FP-ARDS patients is found. IGF-I mRNA is elevated in the FP-ARDS lung biopsies. Our data suggest that IGF-I found in the lungs of FP-ARDS patients results from both increased lung permeability and local production of IGF-I. The role of IGF-I in the fibroproliferative process in the lungs has recently been confirmed in an animal model of lung fibroproliferation. This study importantly suggest that IGF-I protein is made in the lungs of FP-ARDS patients and correlates with increased levels of ELF PCP-III, implicating a role for IGF-I in the fibroproliferative process in humans.

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