Reframing sepsis immunobiology for translation: towards informative subtyping and targeted immunomodulatory therapies.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_774F5F5B62A7
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Reframing sepsis immunobiology for translation: towards informative subtyping and targeted immunomodulatory therapies.
Journal
The Lancet. Respiratory medicine
Author(s)
Shankar-Hari M., Calandra T., Soares M.P., Bauer M., Wiersinga W.J., Prescott H.C., Knight J.C., Baillie K.J., Bos LDJ, Derde LPG, Finfer S., Hotchkiss R.S., Marshall J., Openshaw PJM, Seymour C.W., Venet F., Vincent J.L., Le Tourneau C., Maitland-van der Zee A.H., McInnes I.B., van der Poll T.
ISSN
2213-2619 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2213-2600
Publication state
Published
Issued date
04/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
12
Number
4
Pages
323-336
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Review
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Sepsis is a common and deadly condition. Within the current model of sepsis immunobiology, the framing of dysregulated host immune responses into proinflammatory and immunosuppressive responses for the testing of novel treatments has not resulted in successful immunomodulatory therapies. Thus, the recent focus has been to parse observable heterogeneity into subtypes of sepsis to enable personalised immunomodulation. In this Personal View, we highlight that many fundamental immunological concepts such as resistance, disease tolerance, resilience, resolution, and repair are not incorporated into the current sepsis immunobiology model. The focus for addressing heterogeneity in sepsis should be broadened beyond subtyping to encompass the identification of deterministic molecular networks or dominant mechanisms. We explicitly reframe the dysregulated host immune responses in sepsis as altered homoeostasis with pathological disruption of immune-driven resistance, disease tolerance, resilience, and resolution mechanisms. Our proposal highlights opportunities to identify novel treatment targets and could enable successful immunomodulation in the future.
Keywords
Humans, Disease Resistance, Sepsis, Immunomodulation
Pubmed
Create date
01/03/2024 14:35
Last modification date
03/04/2024 7:08
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