Publication | Open Access
Toward personalized immunotherapy in sepsis: The PROVIDE randomized clinical trial
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Citations
16
References
2022
Year
Clinical ImmunologyImmunohematologyImmune ActivationImmunologyImmune RegulationImmune SystemImmunotherapyInflammationClinical TrialsInflammatory MarkerSepsisSepsis PhenotypingHealth SciencesImmune SurveillanceImmunologic DiseasePlacebo ArmPersonalized TreatmentSepsis Immune ClassificationImmunosuppressionMedicineBlood TransfusionImmunological Biomarkers
The state of immune activation may guide targeted immunotherapy in sepsis. In a double-blind, double-dummy randomized clinical study, 240 patients with sepsis due to lung infection, bacteremia, or acute cholangitis were subjected to measurements of serum ferritin and HLA-DR/CD14. Patients with macrophage activation-like syndrome (MALS) or immunoparalysis were randomized to treatment with anakinra or recombinant interferon-gamma or placebo. Twenty-eight-day mortality was the primary endpoint; sepsis immune classification was the secondary endpoint. Using ferritin >4,420 ng/mL and <5,000 HLA-DR receptors/monocytes as biomarkers, patients were classified into MALS (20.0%), immunoparalysis (42.9%), and intermediate (37.1%). Mortality was 79.1%, 66.9%, and 41.6%, respectively. Survival after 7 days with SOFA score decrease was achieved in 42.9% of patients of the immunotherapy arm and 10.0% of the placebo arm (p = 0.042). Three independent immune classification strata are recognized in sepsis. MALS and immunoparalysis are proposed as stratification for personalized adjuvant immunotherapy. Clinicaltrials.gov registration NCT03332225.
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