Clinical implication of protein levels of IL-5 in induced sputum in asthmatic patients.

Abstract
To determine whether protein levels of interleukin-5 (IL-5) in induced sputum reflect the degree of eosinophilic inflammation, we evaluated the role of IL-5 on clinical characteristics in stable asthmatic patients. IL-5 level, differential eosinophil count, and level of eosinophil cationic protein (ECP) in induced sputum were all significantly higher for asthmatics than for normal controls. Both eosinophil counts and ECP levels in induced sputum were inversely correlated with the degree of airflow limitation (FEV1/FVC). In addition, patients with measurable IL-5 in sputum had significantly more eosinophils, higher levels of ECP in sputum, and lower FEV1 (percent predicted) than did patients with levels of IL-5 beneath the limit of detection. However, we found no significant difference in IL-5 levels between atopic and nonatopic asthmatics. IL-5 level in induced sputum is a good indicator of eosinophilic inflammation in atopic and nonatopic asthmatic patients.