Κυριακή 15 Ιανουαρίου 2023

Myeloid Phenotypes in Tracheostomy‐Associated Granulation Tissue

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Myeloid Phenotypes in Tracheostomy-Associated Granulation Tissue

In patients with indwelling tracheostomy, granulation tissue is a common, recurrent problem that may lead to multiple surgeries, difficulties with decannulation, and even wound contracture leading to stenosis at the site of prosthesis. This study demonstrates that alternatively activated M2 macrophages are increased in airway granulation tissue as determined by gene expression analysis of canonical biomarkers and cell surface antigens assessed by flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry. The monocyte cell populations associated with granulation tissue are predominantly classical subtype and the majority of macrophages were positive for pro-inflammatory marker S100A8/A9 with 36% of macrophages co-localizing the biomarker CD169+, highlighting these cell population as potential therapeutic targets for airway granulation tissue.


Objective(s)

Tracheostomy-associated granulation tissue is a common, recurrent problem occurring secondary to chronic mucosal irritation. Although granulation tissue is composed of predominantly innate immune cells, the phenotype of monocytes and macrophages in tracheostomy-associated granulation tissue is unknown. This study aims to define the myeloid cell population in granulation tissue secondary to tracheostomy.

Methods

Granulation tissue biopsies were obtained from 8 patients with tracheostomy secondary to laryngotracheal stenosis. Cell type analysis was performed by flow cytometry and gene expression was measured by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. These methods and immunohistochemistry were used to define the monocyte/macrophage population in granulation tissue and were compared to tracheal autopsy control specimens.

Results

Flow cytometry demonstrated macrophages (CD45+CD11b+) and monocytes (CD45+FSClowSSClow) represent 23.2 ± 6% of the granulation tissue cell population. The M2 phenotype (CD206) is present in 77 ± 11% of the macrophage population and increased compared to the M1 phenotype (p = 0.012). Classical monocytes (CD45+CD14highCD16low) were increased in granulation tissue compared to controls (61.2 ± 7% and 30 ± 8.5%, p = 0.038). Eighty-five percent of macrophages expressed pro-inflammatory S100A8/A9 and 36 ± 4% of macrophages co-localized CD169, associated with tissue-resident macrophages. M2 gene expression (Arg1/CD206) was increased in granulation tissue (3.7 ± 0.4, p = 0.035 and 3.5 ± 0.5, p = 0.047) whereas M1 gene expression (CD80/CD86) was similar to controls (p = 0.64, p = 0.3). Immunohistochemistry of gra nulation tissue demonstrated increased cells co-localizing CD11b and CD206.

Conclusions

M2 macrophages are the dominant macrophage phenotype in tracheostomy-associated granulation tissue. The role of this cell type in promoting ongoing inflammation warrants future investigation to identify potential treatments for granulation tissue secondary to tracheostomy.

Level of Evidence

3 Laryngoscope, 2023

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