Objectives: In the search for more effective and safe treatment avenues, we investigated cold physical plasma as a new treatment modality for therapy of oral lichen planus (OLP).
Material and methods: Healthy and diseased human mucosal tissue samples with a size of 3 mm in diameter obtained from OLP patients were subjected to plasma treatment ex vivo or were left untreated. Tissue sections were quantified for immune-infiltration of CD4+ , CD8+ , CD45RA+ , and CD45R0+ T cells. Moreover, the tissues' inflammatory profile was assessed by analyzing 12 different cytokines in the surrounding media.
Results: A significantly increased infiltrate of CD8+ and CD45-R0+ T cells was detected in OLP tissue samples when compared to healthy tissue. A higher concentration of interleukin (IL) 1β, IL6, IL8, and granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor (GM-CMF) was detected in OLP samples compared to healthy mucosal tissue. For all cytokines and chemokines investigated, 23 out of 24 comparisons showed a decrease in tendency (significant for IL1β, IL2, IL10, and GM-CSF) in response to plasma treatment. In ex vivo-treated tissue, a decrease of T-cell infiltrate in OLP lesions compared with healthy tissue was observed.
Conclusion: Our findings suggest cold physical plasma can be a promising therapeutic option for OLP that requires further validation in vivo.
Keywords: T cells; cytokines; kINPen MED.
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