The Influence of Lactoferrin in Plasma and Peritoneal Fluid on Iron Metabolism in Women with Endometriosis.
Ewa SkarżyńskaMonika WróbelHanna ZborowskaMateusz Franciszek KołekGrzegorz MańkaMariusz KieckaMichał LipaDamian WarzechaRobert Z SpaczynskiPiotr PiekarskiBeata BanaszewskaArtur Jacek JakimiukTadeusz IssatWojciech RokitaMlodawski JakubMaria SzubertPiotr SieroszewskiGrzegorz RabaKamil SzczupakTomasz KluzMarek KluzaMiroslaw WielgosBarbara Lisowska-MyjakPiotr LaudańskiPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between lactoferrin and iron and its binding proteins in women with endometriosis by simultaneously measuring these parameters in plasma and peritoneal fluid. Ninety women were evaluated, of whom 57 were confirmed as having endometriosis. Lactoferrin was measured by ELISA, transferrin, ferritin and iron on a Cobas 8000 analyser. Lactoferrin and transferrin in peritoneal fluid were lower compared to plasma, in contrast to ferritin and iron. In plasma, lactoferrin showeds associations with iron and transferrin in endometriosis and with ferritin in the group without endometriosis. Lactoferrin in peritoneal fluid correlated with lactoferrin, iron and transferrin of plasma in patients without endometriosis. The ratio of lactoferrin concentration in peritoneal fluid to plasma differentiated stage I versus IV of endometriosis and was negatively correlated with the iron ratio in patients without endometriosis. The ferritin ratio differentiated women with and without endometriosis. The very high ferritin ratios, especially in advanced stages of endometriosis, suggest the protective involvement of this protein in peritoneal fluid and the loss of this role by lactoferrin. The results demonstrate the validity of assessing iron metabolism in women with endometriosis, which may be useful as a marker of the disease and its progression.