Abstract

Omega-3 long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LCPUFA) reduce circulating cytokines produced by monocytes. Nevertheless, whether the omega-3 LCPUFA regulate the monocytes and their cytokines in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is unknown. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether circulating pro-inflammatory monocytes are increased and whether omega-3 LCPUFA selectively suppress these monocytes and their cytokines in patients with DMD. This was a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled pilot study carried out in patients with DMD supplemented with omega-3 LCPUFA (n=6) or sunflower oils (placebo, n=6) for 6months. Monocytes and their cytokines were measured at baseline and after 1, 2, 3, and 6months of supplementation. The anti-inflammatory monocytes (median, [95% CI]) are increased at month 3 (-0.46 [-13.5-9.5] vs. 8.4 [5.5-12.5], p=0.05) in the omega-3 LCPUFA group compared with the placebo group. The pro-inflammatory monocytes (-5.7 [-63.8-114.1] vs. -51.9 [-91.2 to -25.4], p=0.026 and -16.4 [-50.8-50.6] vs. -57.9 [-86.9 to -18.5], p=0.045 at months 3 and 6, respectively) and their cytokine interleukin 6 (-11.9 [-93.5-148.9] vs. -64.7 [-77.8 to -42.6], p=0.019 at month 6) decreased in the omega-3 LCPUFA group compared with the placebo group. Pro-inflammatory monocytes decreased and anti-inflammatory monocytes were augmented (p<0.05) during the 6months of supplementation with omega-3 LCPUFA. This pilot study suggests that supplementation with omega-3 LCPUFA could have a selective reductive effect on pro-inflammatory monocytes and their cytokines in patients with DMD. These findings also support the performance of studies in a significant population to explore the role of omega-3 LCPUFA on monocyte populations and their cytokines in patients with DMD. This research was registered at clinicaltrials.gov (NCT018264229).

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