Effect of Peritoneal Fluid From Endometriosis Patients on Endometrial Stromal Cell Proliferation In Vitro
- 1 November 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Obstetrics & Gynecology
- Vol. 76 (5) , 792-797
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006250-199011000-00013
Abstract
Late proliferative phase endometrial stromal cells grown in short-term culture were used as a model for the stromal component of endometriotic implants. Cells were grown in medium alone and in medium supplemented by 5, 10,and 20% concentrations of the cell-free fractions of peritoneal fluid obtained from patients with and without endometriosis. Nine fluid-sample pairs were matched based on the presence or absence of endometriosis at laparoscopy and the similarity of peritoneal fluid estradiol concentrations. Stromal cell proliferation as reflected by 3H-thymidine incorporation during sequential cell harvests over 72 hours was greater for cells exposed to endometriosis peritoneal fluid than for those exposed to non-endometriosis peritoneal fluid. This reached statistical significance with exposure to peritoneal fluid concentrations of 10 and 20% (P <.05). A linear dose-respone relationship between 3H-thymidine incorporation and peritoneal fluid concentration could be derived only for stromal cells exposed to fluid samples obtained from endometriosis patients (r = 0.51; P < .001). In addition, proliferation over 72 hours was significantly greater for cells grown in 20% endometriosis peritoneal fluid than for those grown in nutrient medium alone (P <.001). These data imply that factor(s) secreted into the peritoneal fluid of endometriosis patients may play a role in the proliferation or maintenance of disease implants.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reduced trypsin-binding capacity of α2-macroglobulin in the peritoneal fluid of women with endometriosis: possible relevance to alterations in macrophase function**Supported by the Career Development Program of the Veterans Administration (M.H.); the Josiah Charles Trent Foundation (A.F.H.); the Veterans Administration, research grant P01-A123308 from the National Institutes of Health and the James Swiger Hematology Research Fund (J.B.W.).Fertility and Sterility, 1988
- A simple method for the assay of eight steroids in small volumes of plasmaSteroids, 1976