RESUMO
BACKGROUND: The combinatorial effects of Plasmodium infection, perturbation of inflammatory responses and the dichotomic role of TNF promoter polymorphism has potential clinical and physiological relevance during pregnancy. OBJECTIVE AND METHODS: This coordinated orchestration instigated us to investigate the circulating level of inflammatory cytokines (IL-1ß, TNF-α and IL-6) employing ELISA in a stratified group of samples and the plausible genetic association of TNF-α -308 G/A using PCR-RFLP/sequencing during Plasmodium vivax infection in pregnancy. RESULTS: We observed significantly elevated concentrations of IL-1ß were observed, followed by IL-6 and TNF-α in women with malaria (WWM) and in malaria in pregnancy (MIP). Further, elevated IL-1ß, followed by TNF-α and IL-6 were detected in the non-infected pregnancy group. The differential dynamics of inflammatory cytokine concentration during each trimester of pregnancy with and without P. vivax infection were detected. For the first time, a high level of IL-6 was observed in the first trimester of MIP and high IL-1ß in healthy pregnancies. In the second trimester, however, we observed a high level of IL-1ß in the MIP group compared to a sustained high level of IL-1ß in the healthy pregnancy group. In the third trimester, high IL-1ß was sustained in the MIP group and healthy pregnancies acquired a high TNF-α level. The genotypic distribution for the TNF-α promoter -308 G/A position was observed to be nonsignificant and mildly associated during MIP (ORâ¯=â¯1.4) and in WWM (ORâ¯=â¯1.2). Moreover, based on genotypic distribution, we observed a well-correlated and significantly elevated TNF-α concentration in the mutant homozygote genotype (AA; pâ¯=â¯0.001) followed by heterozygotes (GA; pâ¯=â¯0.0001) and ancestral genotypes (GG; pâ¯=â¯0.0001) in both MIP and WWM subjects. CONCLUSION: The observation of elevated IL-1ß and IL-6 in MIP and TNF-α in WWM may be regarded as a prognostic inflammatory marker of infection and pregnancy. Most particularly, the TNF-α concentration and its polymorphic variability in the promoter region may indicate genetic susceptibility and mildly influence the risk for P. vivax infection during pregnancy and in women with malaria.