Problem: Menstrual cycle-associated variability in the circulating levels of several cytokines can be a confounding factor in measurements of in vivo cytokine levels in clinical studies. Since pregnancy-associated increases in interleukin-10 (IL-10) levels are well documented, we have investigated the variability in serum levels of IL-10 in healthy women at different stages of the menstrual cycle to ascertain whether this is a problem in comparative studies of circulating IL-10 levels.
Method of study: We obtained fifty-four successive serum samples at points in the menstrual cycles of 12 healthy fertile women, precisely timed by measurement of the luteinizing hormone surge, and measured the interleukin-10 levels.
Results: Levels of IL-10 in successive serum samples from each woman taken on days LH - 7 (that is seven days prior to LH surge), LH - 4, LH + 1, LH + 7, and LH + 10 showed that IL-10 does not vary in a systematic way during the menstrual cycle.
Conclusion: These results validate the sampling of women in studies of IL-10 levels in various clinical situations and establish that these levels are not dependent on menstrual cycle dates. They also suggest that menstrual cycle-related changes in IL-1 are not mediated by IL-10. The rise in progesterone in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle is not mirrored by a rise in the circulating IL-10 level, which implies either that the pregnancy-associated rise is not related to progesterone or that it is only observed at the higher progesterone levels in pregnancy.