Patients with cirrhosis are susceptible to infection, but the mechanisms underlying this immunosuppression remain unclear. Derek W. Gilroy and colleagues show that plasma prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) is elevated in these patients and in mouse models of liver injury and suppresses TNF-α release from macrophages. Albumin, which binds to PGE2 and reduces its bioavailability, is reduced in the plasma of a subset of cirrhosis patients. Administration of albumin partially reverses the immunosuppression observed in vitro and restores bacterial killing in mouse models, suggesting that future studies are warranted on the use of albumin to prevent infection in a subset of patients with cirrhosis.
- Alastair J O'Brien
- James N Fullerton
- Derek W Gilroy