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Host-directed immune therapies: a second front in the battle against sepsis
Richard S. Hotchkiss, Guillaume Monneret
Richard S. Hotchkiss, Guillaume Monneret
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Review

Host-directed immune therapies: a second front in the battle against sepsis

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Abstract

Each year, sepsis claims more lives in the United States than many major cancers and HIV/AIDS combined, yet therapeutic progress has been modest. Adding to this crisis is the alarming rise of multidrug-resistant “superbugs,” which increasingly render conventional antibiotics ineffective. Pathogen-targeted antibiotics will always remain a cornerstone of sepsis treatment, and research into novel antibiotics must continue unabated. However, the consistent mortality in sepsis tells us this approach is insufficient. Most deaths in sepsis do not occur during the early cytokine storm–driven hyper-inflammatory phase but rather days or weeks after the initial insult, during a protracted phase of immune suppression. Here, we make the case that a crucial way to reduce sepsis mortality lies in restoration of the patient’s immune competence, enabling the patient to contain and kill the invading microbes. Adjuvant immune therapies will not only enable killing of the initial, invading pathogens but also prevent secondary, hospital-acquired infections. Immunotherapy revolutionized oncology by challenging the assumption that cancer was best treated through cytotoxic or targeted tumor-directed approaches, and sepsis now stands at a similar inflection point. We argue that embracing immune restoration as a core therapeutic objective offers the most promising means to improve survival in this lethal disorder.

Authors

Richard S. Hotchkiss, Guillaume Monneret

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Figure 1

Host-directed therapies.

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Host-directed therapies.
In addition to antibiotics, immune modulatory t...
In addition to antibiotics, immune modulatory therapies are likely to play an increasingly vital role in infectious diseases, including sepsis. Therapies to dampen an overexuberant hyper-inflammatory response or to boost an inadequate immune response will be selected based upon immune phenotyping. Immune adjuvant therapies to enhance host immunity will be important because most deaths from sepsis occur in patients with impaired immunity due to age (immunosenescence) or comorbidities. Immune adjuvant therapies offer key advantages in that they are pathogen agnostic (protect against a broad range of microorganisms, including multidrug-resistant pathogens) and will not induce antibiotic resistance.

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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