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Sepsis-induced immune dysfunction: can immune therapies reduce mortality?

Matthew J. Delano, Peter A. Ward

Journal of Clinical Investigation · 2016 · ▲ 641 citations

Abstract

Sepsis is a systemic inflammatory response induced by an infection, leading to organ dysfunction and mortality. Historically, sepsis-induced organ dysfunction and lethality were attributed to the interplay between inflammatory and antiinflammatory responses. With advances in intensive care management and goal-directed interventions, early sepsis mortality has diminished, only to surge later after "recovery" from acute events, prompting a search for sepsis-induced alterations in immune function. Sepsis is well known to alter innate and adaptive immune responses for sustained periods after clinical "recovery," with immunosuppression being a prominent example of such alterations. Recent studies have centered on immune-modulatory therapy. These efforts are focused on defining and reversing the persistent immune cell dysfunction that is associated with mortality long after the acute events of sepsis have resolved.

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Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1172/jci82224
Canonical
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Fetched
2026-06-07 MST

Cite this

APA
Delano, M.J., &amp; Ward, P.A. (2016). Sepsis-induced immune dysfunction: can immune therapies reduce mortality?. <em>Journal of Clinical Investigation</em>. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci82224
Vancouver
Delano MJ, Ward PA. Sepsis-induced immune dysfunction: can immune therapies reduce mortality?. Journal of Clinical Investigation. 2016. doi:10.1172/jci82224.
BibTeX
@article{matthew2016Sepsis, title = {Sepsis-induced immune dysfunction: can immune therapies reduce mortality?}, author = {Matthew J. Delano and Peter A. Ward}, journal = {Journal of Clinical Investigation}, year = {2016}, doi = {10.1172/jci82224}, }

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