Evaluation of Immunosuppression in Septic Shock: Biomarkers and Pharmacological Restoration (IMMUNOSEPSIS)

NCT02803346 · Status: UNKNOWN · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 160

Last updated 2016-06-16

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Septic syndromes (systemic inflammatory response associated with infection) remain a major although largely under-recognized health care problem and represent the first cause of mortality in intensive care units. While it has long been known that sepsis deeply perturbs immune homeostasis by inducing a tremendous systemic inflammatory response, novel findings indicate that sepsis indeed initiates a more complex immunologic response that varies over time, with the concomitant occurrence of both pro- and anti-inflammatory mechanisms. As a resultant, after a short pro-inflammatory phase, septic patients enter a stage of protracted immunosuppression. This is illustrated in those patients by reactivation of dormant viruses (CMV or HSV) or infections due to pathogens, including fungi, which are normally pathogenic solely in immunocompromised hosts. These alterations might be directly responsible for worsening outcome in patients who survived initial resuscitation as nearly all immune functions are deeply compromised. Both arms of immunity (innate and adaptive) are indeed markedly suppressed (including enhanced leukocyte apoptosis, lymphocyte anergy and deactivated monocyte functions). New promising therapeutic avenues are currently emerging from those recent findings such as adjunctive immunostimulation for the most immunosuppressed patients. The prerequisite for immunostimulation administration (IFNg, GM-CSF, IL-7) however relies on the investigators capacity in identifying the patients who could benefit from it, as there is no clinical sign of immune dysfunctions. The main objectives are:

1. to identify the best biomarkers for sepsis-induced immunosuppression and
2. to evaluate ex vivo whether drugs could rejuvenate immune functions.

Conditions

  • Immunology of Septic Shock

Interventions

OTHER

Circulating blood (leukocytes)

mHLA-DR measurement (in vitro)

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Hospices Civils de Lyon

    lead OTHER

Eligibility

Min Age
18 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2009-01-31
Primary Completion
2016-12-31
Completion
2016-12-31

Countries

  • France

Study Locations

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Read the full study record

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View NCT02803346 on ClinicalTrials.gov