| Literature DB >> 29740793 |
Antonio Riva1,2, Shilpa Chokshi3,4.
Abstract
Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) is an escalating global problem accounting for more than 3 million deaths annually. Bacterial infections are diagnosed in 25-47% of hospitalized patients with cirrhosis and represent the most important trigger for acute decompensation, multi-organ failure, septic shock and death. Current guidelines recommend intensive antibiotic therapy, but this has led to the emergence of multi-drug resistant bacteria, which are associated with increased morbidity and mortality rates. As such, there is a pressing need to explore new paradigms for anti-infective therapy and host-directed immunomodulatory therapies are a promising approach. Paradoxically, cirrhotic patients are characterised by heightened immune activity and exacerbated inflammatory processes but are unable to contend with bacterial infection, demonstrating that whilst immune effector cells are primed, their antibacterial effector functions are switched-off, reflecting a skewed homeostatic balance between anti-pathogen immunity and host-induced immunopathology. Preservation of this equilibrium physiologically is maintained by multiple immune-regulatory checkpoints and these feedback receptors serve as pivotal regulators of the host immunity. Checkpoint receptor blockade is proving to be effective at rescuing deranged/exhausted immunity in pre-clinical studies for chronic viral infection and sepsis. This approach has also obtained FDA approval for restoring anti-tumor immunity, with improved response rates and good safety profiles. To date, no clinical studies have investigated checkpoint blockade in ALD, highlighting an area for development of host-targeted immunotherapeutic strategies in ALD, for which there are no current specific treatment options. This review aims at framing current knowledge on immune checkpoints and the possibility of their therapeutic utility in ALD-associated immune dysfunctions.Entities:
Keywords: ALD; Checkpoint; Immunotherapy
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29740793 PMCID: PMC5999155 DOI: 10.1007/s12072-018-9867-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatol Int ISSN: 1936-0533 Impact factor: 6.047
Fig. 1Immune regulation by checkpoint receptors (CR) and their ligands (CR–L), and effects of immune checkpoint blockade with neutralizing antibodies. Checkpoint receptors modulate the breadth, magnitude and spread of the immune response by balancing stimulatory and inhibitory signals delivered to immune cells by antigen-presenting cells or target cells (a). Blockade of immune checkpoint receptors or their ligands with neutralizing antibodies (Anti-CR Ab and Anti-CR–L Ab) can dampen inflammatory responses and restore dysfunctional immunity (b)
Fig. 2Increased expression of inhibitory checkpoint receptors suppresses homeostatic immunity and checkpoint blockade restores a healthy state. The homeostatic balance between anti-pathogen immunity and host-induced immunopathology is maintained in physiological conditions; this maintains a healthy immune state (a). Upon chronic stimulation, inhibitory checkpoints are hyper-expressed, limiting uncontrolled responses and immune-mediated damage but simultaneously suppressing efficient anti-pathogen responses (b). Blockade of inhibitory checkpoints can suppress these hyper-inhibitory signals, restoring a healthy immune state (c)
Fig. 3Immune checkpoints as therapeutic targets. Monoclonal antibodies currently in clinical development or tested in clinical trials against CTLA-4, PD-1, PD-L1, LAG-3 and TIM-3, as new anticancer agents, as these same immune checkpoint antibodies also represent the most promising therapeutic agents for future clinical trials in ALD