Brady Jack, Horie Shahd, Laffey John G
Anaesthesia, School of Medicine, Clinical Sciences Institute, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland.
Regenerative Medicine Institute (REMEDI) at CÚRAM Centre for Research in Medical Devices, Biomedical Sciences Building, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland.
Intensive Care Med Exp. 2020 Dec 18;8(Suppl 1):20. doi: 10.1186/s40635-020-00309-z.
Sepsis is a syndrome of shock and dysfunction of multiple vital organs that is caused by an uncontrolled immune response to infection and has a high mortality rate. There are no therapies for sepsis, and it has become a global cause for concern. Advances in patient care and management now mean that most patients survive the initial hyper-inflammatory phase of sepsis but progress to a later immunosuppressed phase, where 30% of patients die due to secondary infection. Deficits in the adaptive immune response may play a major role in sepsis patient mortality. The adaptive immune response involves a number of cell types including T cells, B cells and dendritic cells, all with immunoregulatory roles aimed at limiting damage and returning immune homeostasis after infection or insult. However, in sepsis, adaptive immune cells experience cell death or exhaustion, meaning that they have defective effector and memory responses ultimately resulting in an ineffective or suppressed immune defence. CD4+ T cells seem to be the most susceptible to cell death during sepsis and have ensuing defective secretory profiles and functions. Regulatory T cells seem to evade apoptosis and contribute to the immune suppression observed with sepsis. Preclinical studies have identified a number of new targets for therapy in sepsis including anti-apoptotic agents and monoclonal antibodies aimed at reducing cell death, exhaustion and maintaining/restoring adaptive immune cell functions. While early phase clinical trials have demonstrated safety and encouraging signals for biologic effect, larger scale clinical trial testing is required to determine whether these strategies will prove effective in improving outcomes from sepsis.
脓毒症是一种由对感染的失控免疫反应引起的休克和多重要器官功能障碍综合征,死亡率很高。目前尚无治疗脓毒症的方法,它已成为全球关注的问题。患者护理和管理方面的进展现在意味着大多数患者在脓毒症的初始高炎症阶段存活下来,但会进展到后期免疫抑制阶段,其中30%的患者因继发感染而死亡。适应性免疫反应缺陷可能在脓毒症患者的死亡率中起主要作用。适应性免疫反应涉及多种细胞类型,包括T细胞、B细胞和树突状细胞,它们都具有免疫调节作用,旨在限制感染或损伤后的损害并恢复免疫稳态。然而,在脓毒症中,适应性免疫细胞会经历细胞死亡或耗竭,这意味着它们的效应和记忆反应存在缺陷,最终导致免疫防御无效或受到抑制。CD4+ T细胞似乎在脓毒症期间最易发生细胞死亡,并随之出现分泌谱和功能缺陷。调节性T细胞似乎能逃避凋亡,并导致脓毒症时出现的免疫抑制。临床前研究已经确定了一些脓毒症治疗的新靶点,包括旨在减少细胞死亡、耗竭并维持/恢复适应性免疫细胞功能的抗凋亡药物和单克隆抗体。虽然早期临床试验已经证明了安全性和令人鼓舞的生物学效应信号,但还需要更大规模的临床试验来确定这些策略是否能有效改善脓毒症的预后。