Neopterin is a metabolite of guanosine-triphosphate, released in vitro by macrophages under the control of gamma-interferon and described as a marker of T cell activation in vivo. We have compared the urinary neopterin/creatinine ratio (mumol/mol) in patients with pulmonary sarcoidosis (n = 66), interstitial lung diseases other than sarcoidosis (nonsarcoid ILD, n = 35), and 45 normal control subjects. For the sarcoid population as a whole, urinary neopterin was higher (496 +/- 52 mumol/mol [mean +/- SEM]) than in control subjects (126 +/- 5 mumol/mol) (p less than 0.001). In patients with nonsarcoid ILD, urinary neopterin was frequently higher in granulomatous and/or lymphoproliferative diseases (hypersensitivity pneumonitis, tuberculosis, primitive Sjögren's syndrome, and malignant lymphomas) (781 +/- 193 mumol/mol, n = 10) but remained normal in other types of nonsarcoid ILD [( 163 +/- 14 mumol/mol, n = 25]: histiocytosis X, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, lung collagen-vascular diseases, diffuse neoplasms, pneumoconiosis; p less than 0.001 compared with sarcoidosis). We have also evaluated the relationship between urinary neopterin and the clinical or biologic markers currently used to assess sarcoidosis: alveolar lymphocytosis in lavage fluid (ALY), 67-gallium scan semiquantitative index (67Ga), or serum angiotensin-converting enzyme (SACE). Sarcoid patients with the highest urinary neopterin were those in whom mean values of these markers were the highest (p less than 0.05, all comparisons). Patients with positive markers (i.e., either clinical expression of sarcoidosis-ALY greater than 30%-67Ga greater than 20-SACE greater than 60 U/ml) had significantly higher urinary neopterin levels than did other sarcoid patients (p less than 0.05, all comparisons).

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm/139.6.1474DOI Listing

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