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      Immunosuppression in sepsis: a novel understanding of the disorder and a new therapeutic approach.

      1 , ,
      The Lancet. Infectious diseases
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          Failures of highly touted trials have caused experts to call for re-evaluation of the current approach toward sepsis. New research has revealed key pathogenic mechanisms; autopsy results have shown that most patients admitted to intensive care units for treatment of sepsis had unresolved septic foci at post mortem, suggesting that patients were unable to eradicate invading pathogens and were more susceptible to nosocomial organisms, or both. These results suggest that therapies that improve host immunity might increase survival. Additional work showed that cytokine production by splenocytes taken post mortem from patients who died of sepsis is profoundly suppressed, possibly because of so-called T-cell exhaustion-a newly recognised immunosuppressive mechanism that occurs with chronic antigenic stimulation. Results from two clinical trials of biomarker-guided therapeutic drugs that boosted immunity showed promising findings in sepsis. Collectively, these studies emphasise the degree of immunosuppression that occurs in sepsis, and explain why many previous sepsis trials which were directed at blocking inflammatory mediators or pathogen recognition signalling pathways failed. Finally, highly encouraging results from use of the new immunomodulatory molecules interleukin 7 and anti-programmed cell death 1 in infectious disease point the way for possible use in sepsis. We hypothesise that immunoadjuvant therapy represents the next major advance in sepsis.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Lancet Infect Dis
          The Lancet. Infectious diseases
          Elsevier BV
          1474-4457
          1473-3099
          Mar 2013
          : 13
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Anesthesiology, Medicine, and Surgery; Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA. hotch@wustl.edu
          Article
          S1473-3099(13)70001-X NIHMS505090
          10.1016/S1473-3099(13)70001-X
          3798159
          23427891
          cf51ccaa-694e-454e-afeb-9b62cb2a4382
          Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
          History

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