COPD is a major health problem, with patients showing a progressively
declining, largely irreversible, change in lung function. This is
associated with chronic airways inflammation and structural remodeling,
including loss of alveolar walls, and goblet cell metaplasia with mucus
hypersecretion. Inflammatory cells may contribute to the airway remodeling
via secretion of proteases, fibrotic or mitogenic growth factors, and
cytokines. In turn, airway remodeling may contribute to the clinical
symptoms of COPD. Currently available therapies are directed to
improvement of clinical symptoms and reduction of the airways
inflammation. The commonly used glucocorticosteroids are expected to
reduce the inflammation by acting on kinases or transcription factors
necessary for expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines or chemokines.
However, several long-term and short-term studies showed that
glucocorticosteroids are rather ineffective in improving lung function and
reducing the airway inflammation in patients with COPD. New therapeutic
strategies may reduce the inflammation and alleviate the clinical symptoms
of COPD. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-8, and monocyte
chemoattractant protein-1 are important chemotactic proteins for
macrophages and neutrophils, the predominant inflammatory cells associated
with COPD. As lung levels of these cytokines are higher in COPD compared
to non-COPD patients, they may represent targets for novel therapies