Abstract
Vitamin D deficiency is reported to be involved in pathogenesis of ovarian cancer. But the mechanism is yet to be explored. An imbalance between Th1 and Th2 activity play a crucial role in pathogenesis of many cancers. The purpose of the study is to find out the Th1/Th2 status by estimating TNF-alpha (Th1 marker) and IL-4 (Th2 marker) in ovarian cancer cases and controls and to correlate these with serum vitamin D levels.
A case-control study with 50 ovarian cancer cases and 50 healthy controls was conducted. The cytokines TNF-alpha and IL-4 were estimated by ELISA. Serum vitamin D was measured by electro-chemiluminescence immunoassay method.
Median TNF-alpha levels (12.2 vs 6.2 pg/ml; p value < 0.001) were significantly higher in ovarian cancer patients and mean IL-4 levels (2.22 +/- A 0.51 vs 2.99 +/- A 0.68 pg/ml; p value < 0.05) were significantly lower as compared to those of controls. Levels of TNF-alpha and IL-4 did not vary significantly with clinical staging, and histological grading. Vitamin D levels were negatively correlated with TNF-alpha and positively correlated with IL-4.
Low vitamin D levels promotes Th1 activity increasing TNF-alpha levels and inhibits Th2 activity decreasing IL-4 levels in ovarian cancer. These low levels of vitamin D may induce pro-inflammatory micro ambience which might contribute to pathogenesis of ovarian cancer.