ASSOCIATION BETWEEN INTERLEUKIN-4-PRODUCING T LYMPHOCYTE FREQUENCIES AND REDUCED RISK OF GRAFT-VERSUS-HOST DISEASE1

Abstract
We have previously developed and used limiting dilution analysis to measure frequencies of alloreactive cytotoxic T cell precursors (CTLp) and interleukin (IL)-2-producing T helper cells (IL-2/HTLp) to assess the risk of graft-versus-host disease in bone marrow transplantation (BMT). However, no test has been available to measure precursor frequencies of the important IL-4-secreting subset. We have now established a limiting dilution analysis to measure the frequency of IL-4-producing T helper cells (IL-4/HTLp) using the IL-4-responsive indicator cell line CT.h4S and have applied this assay to measure alloreactive IL-4/HTLp frequencies in BMT donor-recipient pairs. These frequencies were then analyzed in the context of clinical data to assess the relationship between the number of donor anti-recipient IL-4-secreting T cells and disease outcome. Frequencies of IL-4/HTLp have been studied in HLA-identical siblings, HLA-“matched” unrelated, and HLA-mismatched combinations and found to range from ≈1/500,000 in HLA-identical sibling pairs to≈1/2,000 in HLA-DR-mismatched pairs. These frequencies were independent of those for IL-2/HTLp and showed a negative correlation with those for CTLp. Clinical follow-up of 30 patients showed that high IL-4/HTLp frequencies are associated with a reduced risk of severe graft-versus-host disease. High IL-4/HTLp frequencies may also indicate an increased risk of leukemia relapse. Our data suggest that measurement of IL-4/HTLp frequencies provides information distinct from that obtained with CTLp and IL-2/HTLp. This new assay provides a valuable additional method for optimizing donor selection in unrelated BMT.