Background: The aim of this study was to evaluate immune defense mechanisms after laparoscopic (LCHE) and open cholecystectomy (CHE), particularly with regard to monocyte and T-lymphocyte function.
Methods: In a prospective study, we evaluated the following immunological data from 27 patients (21 women, six men; mean age, 47.2 years) submitted to elective LCHE and 14 patients (seven women, seven men; mean age, 60.8 years) undergoing elective CHE: T-lymphocyte proliferation (stimulated by SEA, SEB, TSST-1 with antigen presentation by patient monocytes), expression of cell surface molecules on monocytes (HLA-DR, CD80, L-Selectin), CD4+ T lymphocytes (HLA-DR, CD25, ICAM-1, L-Selectin), and granulocytes (L-Selectin). Blood samples were collected preoperatively and on postoperative days 1 and 6-7. Statistical analysis was performed using the Mann-Whitney U test for paired samples.
Results: HLA-DR on monocytes significantly decreased after LCHE during the early postoperative course but returned to preoperative levels within 1 week. After CHE, significant downregulation of HLA-DR expression persisted throughout the whole observation period. This decrease, however, did not alter the antigen-presenting capacity of monocytes in both groups. Moreover, the APC-independent proliferative capacity of T lymphocytes was unimpaired. CD25 expression was significantly increased on postoperative day 1 after CHE but not after LCHE. Expression of HLA-DR, ICAM1, and L-Selection on CD4+ T cells was not altered in either group. CD80 on monocytes and L-Selection on monocytes and granulocytes remained unchanged after both procedures.
Conclusions: HLA-DR surface molecules on monocytes that are required for antigen presentation were significantly decreased in both groups; they returned to normal within 1 week after LCHE but not after CHE. However, the antigen-presenting capacity for monocytes remained normal in both groups. T-cell stimulation, reflected by an increase of CD25 expression, was observed only after CHE, not after LCHE. We therefore conclude that LCHE interferes less with immune defense than CHE; however, the clinical relevance of the changes noted after the open operation remains to be determined.