Akademska digitalna zbirka SLovenije - logo
E-resources
Peer reviewed Open access
  • Deciphering heterogeneity o...
    Albert Vega, Chloé; Oriol, Guy; Bartolo, François; Lopez, Jonathan; Pachot, Alexandre; Rimmelé, Thomas; Venet, Fabienne; Leray, Véronique; Monneret, Guillaume; Delwarde, Benjamin; Brengel-Pesce, Karen; Textoris, Julien; Mallet, François; Trouillet-Assant, Sophie

    Scientific reports, 09/2020, Volume: 10, Issue: 1
    Journal Article

    The complexity of sepsis pathophysiology hinders patient management and therapeutic decisions. In this proof-of-concept study we characterised the underlying host immune response alterations using a standardised immune functional assay (IFA) in order to stratify a sepsis population. In septic shock patients, ex vivo LPS and SEB stimulations modulated, respectively, 5.3% (1/19) and 57.1% (12/21) of the pathways modulated in healthy volunteers (HV), highlighting deeper alterations induced by LPS than by SEB. SEB-based clustering, identified 3 severity-based groups of septic patients significantly different regarding mHLA-DR expression and TNFα level post-LPS, as well as 28-day mortality, and nosocomial infections. Combining the results from two independent cohorts gathering 20 HV and 60 patients, 1 cluster grouped all HV with 12% of patients. The second cluster grouped 42% of patients and contained all non-survivors. The third cluster grouped 46% of patients, including 78% of those with nosocomial infections. The molecular features of these clusters indicated a distinctive contribution of previously described genes defining a "healthy-immune response" and a "sepsis-related host response". The third cluster was characterised by potential immune recovery that underlines the possible added value of SEB-based IFA to capture the sepsis immune response and contribute to personalised management.